Dan Cooks
One-Pot Mac and Cheese: Creamy, Rich, and Ready in 25 Minutes
No roux, no draining, no fuss — just pasta cooked right in seasoned milk and broth until it builds its own silky sauce. Sharp cheddar, Gruyère, and a secret emulsifier make this weeknight mac unforgettable.
Some nights the grill stays cold. The Florida heat breaks late, the kids are already at the table, and what the family needs is something warm, rich, and ready before anyone starts raiding the snack cabinet. That's when this one-pot mac and cheese earns its place in my rotation. No separate pot of boiling water, no draining, no roux to babysit. You drop the pasta right into a mix of milk and chicken broth, season it boldly, and let the starch do what starch does — build a sauce from the inside out. Finish it with three layers of cheese and you've got a bowl that tastes like it took all afternoon. It didn't. Twenty-five minutes, one pot, and the whole family's happy. That's my kind of weeknight cooking.
Why Cooking Pasta in Milk and Broth Actually Works
Here's the thing about this method that surprises people: it's not a shortcut, it's a technique. When elbow macaroni simmers directly in your liquid, it releases surface starch continuously into the pot. That starch acts as a natural thickener — by the time the pasta is tender and the liquid is mostly absorbed, you've already got a sauce base without touching a single tablespoon of flour. The key is keeping the heat at a steady medium-low once it comes to a boil, and stirring every minute or two so nothing scorches on the bottom. You want the liquid to look nearly gone but the mixture still a little loose — it tightens up fast once the cheese goes in. Pull the pot off the heat before you add any cheese. Hard cheeses like cheddar and Gruyère will seize and turn grainy if they hit a boiling liquid. Let things calm down for half a minute, then stir in the cream cheese first, followed by the grated cheeses in two or three additions. Residual heat does all the melting work you need.
