Mrs Mac’s Deluxe Macaroni Cheese

Macaroni cheese is a favourite in our family so I like to add extra goodness by including vegetables and eggs in my recipe. Be warned. Once you’ve tried this recipe you may never be satisfied with plain macaroni and cheese again.

Macaroni cheese, cooked and golden,

Ingredients

  • 1 cup uncooked macaroni
  • 25g butter
  • 1 tbsp flour
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup grated tasty cheese
  • ½ cauliflower, cut into small florets
  • ½ can creamed sweetcorn
  • ½ cup frozen peas
  • 2 – 3 hardboiled eggs
  • 4 rashers bacon
  • ½ – 1 cup grated cheese
  • 2-3 slices bread or packet breadcrumbs

Cook the macaroni, cauliflower and bacon

  1. Bring a large pot of salted water to the boil. Add 1 cup macaroni and stir to loosen all the pieces. Cook the macaroni at a rolling boil for 10-12 minutes. Stir occasionally to prevent sticking.
  2. Add the cauliflower to the pot halfway through.
  3. When cooked, drain the macaroni and cauliflower into a sieve and rinse with water to stop the macaroni sticking. Put aside until it’s needed.
  4. While the pasta is cooking, fry the bacon in a separate pan.

Make the white sauce while the macaroni etc is cooking

  1. Put 25g butter into a large, microwave-safe bowl. Microwave until melted.
  2. Stir in 1 heaped tbsp flour using a whisk. Microwave for 20 seconds.
  3. Stir the roux (butter & flour mixture) again with the whisk.
  4. Slowly add 1 cup milk, stirring constantly with the whisk to mix it all evenly.
  5. Microwave on high for 2 minutes then remove and stir to help it thicken. Cook for another minute and stir again. 

Put it all together

  1. Tip the macaroni/cauliflower back into its large pan.
  2. Stir 1 cup grated cheese, frozen peas and ½ can creamed sweetcorn into the white sauce.
  3. Cut the fried bacon into small pieces and add it to the macaroni.
  4. Peel and chop the hardboiled eggs and add them as well.
  5. Pour all the cheesy sauce into the pasta mixture and stir together till combined. Then tip the whole thing into a large baking dish.
  6. Mince the bread into crumbs in a food processor or open a packet of crumbs.
  7. Sprinkle the crumbs over the top of the macaroni cheese mixture in the baking tin, then sprinkle grated cheese on top.
  8. Bake in the oven at 180°C for 15 minutes. 
  9. Alternatively, if you’ve been quick and the mixture is still hot, simply pop it under a grill until the cheese is melted and crusty on top. (Take care that it doesn’t burn.)

Tips and Tricks

  • A simple hand whisk is your best friend when it comes to making a white sauce (also called a roux). It works like magic to keep the sauce smooth. 
  • You can make this gluten-free by using gluten-free pasta and flour. 
  • I sometimes add chopped fresh tomatoes too. Yum!
  • I find it easier to make a white sauce in the microwave, but you can do it on a stovetop too. Here’s how:

Melt the butter over medium heat. Stir in the flour and cook, stirring, for a few seconds. Remove from the heat and gradually add the milk, stirring all the time. 

Bring the milk to the boil, stirring it often while it thickens. 

When it’s thick enough, remove from the heat and stir in cheese and corn. 

More Recipes Our Farming Family Loves

How to make perfect cheese scones

Extra-special pumpkin soup

Mushroom Risotto

Mixed grain and walnut salad

The Garston Cemetery: A Very Special Shelter

The normally-tranquil Garston Cemetery was a-buzz early in November.

Residents past and present were gathering along with SDC mayor Gary Tong and councillors John Douglas and Rob Scott, for the opening of the cemetery memorial board and shelter. 

The ceremony marked the end of two years planning, fundraising and organising for the Garston Cemetery Trust. Designed by Gordan McMillan and built by Aaron Abernethy and Jordan MacGregor, this lovely little building is one-of-a-kind. 

Cutting the ribbon on the Garston Cemetery Memorial Board Shelter.
Noel McMillan and Gary Tong open the Garston Memorial Boards’ special shelter.
Continue reading “The Garston Cemetery: A Very Special Shelter”

Muscovy Ducks On The Farm

“What on earth is that?” exclaimed the tradie when he spotted the Muscovy duck sauntering past our gate last week. 

I laughed. We’re used to reactions like that when visitors first see the oversized birds that live in the paddocks around our farmhouse.

Muscovy ducks aren’t the most common farm birds in Southland, but they’ve become a bit of a hobby for us in the last few years. 

So what are Muscovies and how did they get to the farm just as I’d managed to become pet-free? Here’s how it happened.

Muscovy Ducks swimming on a farm duck pond.
Just a few of our Muscovy ducks swimming on the duck pond.
Continue reading “Muscovy Ducks On The Farm”

4 Easy Recipes For Choco-Banana “Ice-Cream”

choco-banana ice-cream dessert in a glass

DID YOU KNOW that you can make a delicious “ice cream” from frozen bananas?  It’s not dairy-based. It’s not loaded with fat, sugar, cholesterol and sodium either. No, this “choco-banana ice-cream” is an almost guilt-free treat. 

Here’s all you need to know…

NB: If you don’t like (or can’t eat) bananas then sadly, this recipe is not for you.

Continue reading “4 Easy Recipes For Choco-Banana “Ice-Cream””

Road Crash Rescue Shows Fire Brigade Skills at Mossburn

An RCR Team works to free a trapped victim from a flipped car.

Back in August, the Mossburn Volunteer Fire Brigade hosted their first-ever Otago-Southland Road Crash Rescue Competition. It was an action-packed day for the five crews taking part. And it turned out to be riveting for the many spectators who lined the pits. 

I had no idea what I was in for when I drove to Mossburn’s old Silver Fern Farms site early on Saturday morning. But I left in awe of the skills, and dedication of all the fire-fighting teams. You couldn’t help being filled with respect for the organisational skills of the Mossburn Fire Brigade.

Mossburn B Road Crash Rescue team surround a wreck while the judges scrutinize their moves.
The Mossburn B team work out how to rescue a trapped crash dummy in this section, called Entrapped.
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Lambing Time: A Family Affair

A ewe nuzzles her tiny black lamb at lambing time

Rewritten and updated for lambing in 2019

Farming is an eight-days-a week job. It’s our livelihood but it’s also our life. So, when our kids were young they helped out on the farm whenever they could. When the lambs arrived we needed them most of all because, in Spring, farming is a family affair.

All Hands On Deck

Each year, when lambing began the kids fought for the chance to drive around the sheep with Dad. It was great fun spotting the new lambs in each paddock. They slid merrily out of the Toyota truck to get the gates and raced to return straying twins to their mothers. 

Continue reading “Lambing Time: A Family Affair”