All of my life, I have enjoyed macaroni and cheese six ways from Sunday. And now, that includes macaroni without the cheese. If you avoid dairy for any reason at all, this recipe will change the landscape of your weeknight dinners. It comes together on the stovetop in about 30 minutes and hits all the marks: Creamy? Check. That familiar orange tint? Heck yeah.
For the same amount of work as making the dairy-infused stuff from scratch, you can make lucious, flavor-packed vegan stovetop macaroni and cheese using pantry ingredients and wholesome, recognizable foods. After years of tinkering, I got this recipe to a point where my daughter—a vocal non-vegan and proud connoisseur of mac and cheese—receives it with cheerful gusto.
The Secret to Creamy Sauce
What makes this vegan mac and cheese so good? Potatoes. Plus some other things, but the potatoes are what launch this recipe into a higher plane of mac and cheese-dom.
I took Coco Morante’s Vegan Queso recipe from our site and fussed around with the seasonings to make it cheesier and less nacho-y. Soaked raw cashews add a dairy-like richness, and cooked potatoes make the sauce silky smooth.
Délice Maison / Mihaela Kozaric Sebrek
A Cheesy Flavor Without the Cheese
To get a classic stovetop macaroni and cheese taste, you’ll drive into the arsenal of vegan flavor boosters. Each one is available at most mainstream grocery stores. By combining them artfully, you’re essentially making your own gourmet fake cheese from scratch.
Nutritional yeast: Lovingly referred to as “nooch” in many circles, nutritional yeast flakes are not active baking yeast. They’re inactive, dehydrated flakes whose yeasty character calls to mind a cheesy aroma and taste. A little nooch goes a long way; I prefer to cap mine at 1/4 cup.
Miso: Any type of miso paste will do. It adds a suave depth to sauces that I’d describe as “instant yum.”
Apple cider vinegar: A small touch of acidic tang helps to cut through the creamy richness of the sauce.
Oil: The cashews contribute some fat, which is important for the sauce’s body. But adding one tablespoon of oil really goes a long way in making this sauce taste like macaroni and cheese and not just cooked pasta tossed with puréed potato goop. You can use any mild oil you like.
Turmeric for color: Since we eat with our eyes, a sauce that’s not ghostly pale is more visually inviting and gets our brains set for a cheesy meal before the first bite. To get that all-important orange color, we boil a carrot and then boost it with a fat pinch of deep yellow ground turmeric.
Délice Maison / Mihaela Kozaric Sebrek
Make It Your Own
This macaroni and cheese easily stands on its own, but it’s pretty rare that I make mac and cheese without add-ins. Here are a few combos that I love.
Cajun: Add Cajun seasoning to the sauce. Most kinds from the store have tons of salt, so omit or reduce the miso accordingly.
Nacho: Add 1 small (4-ounce) can diced green chiles, 1/2 teaspoon chili powder, and 1/2 teaspoon cumin to the sauce. Put 1 cup frozen corn kernels in the bottom of the colander and drain the pasta over them. Then add 1 (15-ounce) can of drained and rinsed black beans to the hot cooked pasta in step 5.
Broccoli: About halfway through cooking the pasta, add up to 1 pound of fresh broccoli florets and peeled, chopped stems.
Chilimac: After draining the pasta, add a bunch of vegan chili to the hot pot. Stir in the sauce and cook, stirring constantly, over medium heat until warmed through. Then add the hot drained pasta.
Peas: This one is a major staple around my house when our cupboards are otherwise bare. Add up to 2 cups of frozen peas to the colander and drain the hot pasta over them. Then return to the pot and proceed with the recipe.
Délice Maison / Mihaela Kozaric Sebrek
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