
Baked Mac and Cheese: a cozy home-cooked favorite with big flavor, practical prep, and servings worth fighting over—in a friendly way.
The Cozy, Crowd‑Pleasing Baked Mac That Actually Delivers
A silky, tangy cheese sauce and a golden baked top turn humble elbows into a family dinner everyone asks for twice.
This baked mac and cheese exists to solve two common kitchen problems: getting kids to eat dinner and getting grownups to love it too. It’s bright and familiar on the plate—comfortingly creamy with a little sparkle from Dijon and Worcestershire—yet smart in technique so the sauce stays velvety instead of gluey. It’s the sort of dish you can toss together on a weeknight and still feel proud to bring to the table.
The sauce is the real star: a simple roux (butter whisked with flour for 1–2 minutes) gets slowly stretched with whole milk and heavy cream until it coats a spoon. Sharp cheddar gives punchy, melty flavor while nutty Gruyère adds depth and a smoother finish; a touch of Dijon and a splash of Worcestershire cut through the richness so every bite tastes lively, not bland. A dusting of paprika on top adds color and a whisper of warmth.
Little technique notes matter: cook the elbow macaroni just shy of al dente and reserve about 1/2 cup of the pasta cooking water to loosen the sauce if needed. Butter a 9x9-inch baking dish, fold the saucy pasta together, top, and bake at 375°F until the edges are bubbling and the surface is golden and inviting. That gentle oven time lets the flavors knit together and gives a slight crisp at the edges that kids (and adults) love to fight over.
This version is practical, too: it serves four as a hearty main or a generous side, and it doubles easily for a crowd. You can assemble it ahead and refrigerate for a day, then pop it into the oven straight from the fridge; leftover mac revives beautifully with a splash of milk or cream to bring the sauce back to life. In short, it’s comforting, reliable, and just fancy enough to make weeknights feel like a little celebration.
Ingredients
How to Make Baked Mac and Cheese
- Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C) and butter a 9x9-inch (or similar) baking dish.
- Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and cook the elbow macaroni until just shy of al dente (about 1–2 minutes less than package directions); reserve 1/2 cup pasta cooking water, then drain the pasta and set aside.
- Meanwhile, melt 4 tablespoons of the butter in a medium saucepan over medium heat, add the flour and whisk constantly for 1–2 minutes to make a roux without browning.
- Slowly whisk in the whole milk and heavy cream, bring to a gentle simmer and cook, whisking, until the sauce thickens and coats the back of a spoon, about 4–6 minutes.
- Remove the sauce from heat and whisk in the Dijon, Worcestershire, paprika, salt and pepper, then stir in the shredded cheddar and Gruyère a handful at a time until fully melted and smooth; if the sauce is too thick, whisk in up to the reserved 1/2 cup pasta water a little at a time.
- Toss the drained pasta into the cheese sauce until evenly coated, then transfer the mac and cheese to the prepared baking dish and smooth the top.
- In a small bowl, mix the panko breadcrumbs with the remaining 2 tablespoons melted butter and the Parmesan; sprinkle the crumb mixture evenly over the pasta.
- Bake until the top is golden and the sauce is bubbling around the edges, 20–25 minutes; for a more browned crust, broil 1–2 minutes more while watching closely.
- Let the dish rest 8–10 minutes before serving so the sauce sets slightly, then garnish with a little extra freshly ground pepper or chopped parsley if desired.
Recipe Card
Baked Mac and Cheese
Baked Mac and Cheese: a cozy home-cooked favorite with big flavor, practical prep, and servings worth fighting over—in a friendly way.

- Prep
- 20 min
- Cook
- 35 min
- Servings
- 4
Ingredients
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C) and butter a 9x9-inch (or similar) baking dish.
- Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and cook the elbow macaroni until just shy of al dente (about 1–2 minutes less than package directions); reserve 1/2 cup pasta cooking water, then drain the pasta and set aside.
- Meanwhile, melt 4 tablespoons of the butter in a medium saucepan over medium heat, add the flour and whisk constantly for 1–2 minutes to make a roux without browning.
- Slowly whisk in the whole milk and heavy cream, bring to a gentle simmer and cook, whisking, until the sauce thickens and coats the back of a spoon, about 4–6 minutes.
- Remove the sauce from heat and whisk in the Dijon, Worcestershire, paprika, salt and pepper, then stir in the shredded cheddar and Gruyère a handful at a time until fully melted and smooth; if the sauce is too thick, whisk in up to the reserved 1/2 cup pasta water a little at a time.
- Toss the drained pasta into the cheese sauce until evenly coated, then transfer the mac and cheese to the prepared baking dish and smooth the top.
- In a small bowl, mix the panko breadcrumbs with the remaining 2 tablespoons melted butter and the Parmesan; sprinkle the crumb mixture evenly over the pasta.
- Bake until the top is golden and the sauce is bubbling around the edges, 20–25 minutes; for a more browned crust, broil 1–2 minutes more while watching closely.
- Let the dish rest 8–10 minutes before serving so the sauce sets slightly, then garnish with a little extra freshly ground pepper or chopped parsley if desired.
Nutrition
- Carbohydrates
- 92
- Saturated Fat
- 30
- Sodium
- 1250
- Fiber
- 3.5
- Unsaturated Fat
- 37
- Protein
- 42
- Fat
- 67
- Cholesterol
- 180
- Trans Fat
- 0.3
- Calories
- 1120
- Sugar
- 7