Hmmm... I follow his recipe pretty spot on (with amended 3/4 cup of milk) and it always comes out perfect. Do you give it a couple minutes to cool down?
quote:quote:Same here, except I use real vegetables instead of Rotel. My last two batches have almost been like water
So the last couple times I've made this it's been pretty runny and I've followed the OPs recipe exactly (just used rotel instead of fresh veggies cause I'm lazy). Any ideas on how to get it to thicken up?
quote:I'd agree with this. Add it in slow, small quantities, not handfuls.
If your cheese is too watery, I imagine its because the temp is too hot, you're adding the cheese too much at a time, or you're not whisking enough. If anything, mine at times comes out too thick, not too thin.
quote:Yup. And if you end up with something to thin you can just cook some of the moisture off.
So let's say that I go with 3/4 cup water to 1.25 tsp citrate and start making it and it gets too thick? Can I add a bit more water after I added the cheese and thin it back out?
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Half extra sharp cheddar, half monterry jack. Mixed it all with elbow macarroni, then out it under the broiler for about 3-4 mins. Cooked up some jalapeno marinaded bacon and crumbled it over the top.
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Question about this stuff; I live overseas in a place where cheese selection is pretty limited. Locally we can get provolone(fresh and smoked), gouda (that is harder, sharper, and more crumbly than any gouda ive had in the states or from the netherlands), mozzerella, and occasionally feta. We have a deep freezer full of cheddar we stock up on anytime we travel out of the area.
With the cheeses we have and can get, is it worth it trying to order some and have my family bring it when they visit for xmas? I'd like to play with it and see what kind of fondue/dip type stuff and mac&cheese i could come up with.