Chicken can be frozen but you must add 2 hours to the cooking time.
- shredded or grated Parmesan cheese
- cream cheese cut into blocks
- milk
- boneless skinless chicken breasts
- Parmesan Garlic Sauce 12 oz
- Yukon Gold Potatoes quartered
- sweet Italian sausage
- lean ground beef
- minced onion
- water
- white sugar
- dried basil leaves
- Italian seasoning
- fennel seeds
- ground black pepper
- lasagna noodles
- ricotta cheese
- egg
- grated Parmesan cheese
- Macaroni:
- kosher salt
- elbow macaroni with ridges
- Cheese Sauce:
- all-purpose flour
- kosher salt
- milk
- grated sharp Cheddar
- Topping:
- breadcrumbs
- Ingredients
- For the sauce
- Whole Wheat Flour
- Salt
- For Mac and Cheese
- Elbow Pasta
- nonstick cooking spray
- salt
- ⅛ teaspoon ground black pepper
- Swiss cheese
- cooked ham
- seasoned bread crumbs
- spaghetti
- reserved pasta water
- garlic powder
- salt
- pepper
- shell pasta
- shredded mozzarella cheese
- butter melted
- grated Parmesan cheese
- minced fresh parsley
- salt
- garlic powder
- pepper
- egg noodles
- butter
- Salt
- Pepper
- Parmesan cheese
For the best results, I recommend using the grams measurements. Alternatively, use the spoon and level method to measure the flour where you fluff up the flour in the container, use a spoon to add it to a measuring cup and level it off with a knife. Using a measuring cup to scoop the flour out of the container will pack it in the measuring cup and make the cookies crumblier. Instead of using almond flour, I’ve had success with using 100g oat flour OR 50g fine white rice flour. After you mix your cookie dough, let it sit for a few minutes as it will thicken up. I prefer the cookies with almond flour as they’re less dry and crumbly. I haven’t tested this recipe with any other flour.
The softer your cookie dough, the richer and more ‘buttery’ your final cookies will be. If you’d like softer cookies, feel free to add 1-2 tablespoons of peanut butter or maple syrup. If you’d like drier cookies, add 1-2 tablespoons of almond flour.