When I was little, my grandfather was the butcher at a small grocery store/service station in the little bitty town of Camden, Alabama. If you’re familiar with Camden, then you know it’s the kind of town where if you blink you’ll miss it. Anyway, one of my fondest memories (I have lots of them) about my grandfather is when I would stay with my grandparents during the summer and I would go to work with him. I remember my grandfather slicing pieces of cheese from a big old wheel of red wax hoop cheese and making cheese toast for breakfast in a little oven in the back of the store. Lunch was always some more of that good hoop cheese and sliced deli meat. You don’t find hoop cheese around much anymore, but when I walked into my local grocery store last week and eyed that bright red wax rind, I was instantly taken back to the days I’d spend with my grandfather. Another highlight of that awesome cheese was my grandmother’s macaroni and cheese made with it. To me, there is no better way to do mac and cheese than with some hoop cheese. So I snatched up a big chunk of that stuff and the rest is history.
This is a super easy stove top version of mac and cheese. It’s ooey, gooey and is sure to become an instant comfort food classic at your house.
- 2 cups macaroni
- 1 quart water
- 1 1/2 tablespoon salt
- 3/4 lb red wax hoop cheese
- 5oz can evaporated milk
Directions
- Bring water to a boil in a medium sized pot.. Once boiling, add salt and macaroni and cook until tender.
- Cut cheese in small cubes.
- Drain macaroni and return to pot. Add cheese and evaporated milk.
- Stir until cheese is melted. Serve immediately.
Recipe Card
Nana’s Hoop Cheese Macaroni and Cheese
Ingredients
- 2 cups macaroni
- 1 quart water
- 1 1/2 tablespoon salt
- 3/4 lb red wax hoop cheese
- 5 oz can evaporated milk
Instructions
- Bring water to a boil in a medium sized pot. Once boiling, add salt and macaroni and cook until al dente.
- Cut cheese in small cubes.
- Drain macaroni and return to pot. Over low heat, add cheese and evaporated milk.
- Stir until cheese is melted. Serve immediately.
* If nutritional values are provided, they are an estimate and will vary depending on the brands used. The values do not include optional ingredients or when ingredients are added to taste. If calorie count and other nutritional values are important to you, I recommend grabbing your favorite brands and plugging those ingredients into an online nutritional calculator.
Barb A. J.
I have always want to master Baked Mac N’ Cheese, but I just can’t seem to get the taste right with the flour. Mine always taste of Flour. So, I’m just going to stick with stovetop Mac N’ Cheese. Thanks for this recipe. Looks just what I’m looking for. I’ll let you know how well I do. But first I have to get to the store.
Stacey
The key with making a roux is ensuring that you cook the roux/flour long enough to cook out the raw taste.
Myrna
Brings back memories of that big pan of macaroni and cheese on Sunday’s as a kid. We used black waxed Noo York Cheddar cheese and baked golden brown on top.My uncle had the store and post office. I loved that big case of meats and cheese. Things like fried baloney sandwiches came outta there.
How many of your posters remember the miniature loaf of Wonder Bread as samples ?
See why southerners are so happy ?
Good food equals great memories and blessings.
Thanks Stacey and Nana. This is the recipe.
Stacey
Such fun memories!
Dolores Speraando
Are you talking about Gouda Cheese? It has a red casing.
Stacey
No, it’s not anything like gouda. It’s hoop cheese. Like this: https://www.cheese.com/hoop-cheese/
angelitacarmelita
okay, this may sound strange to some, but I was also raised on hoop cheese, love it to pieces! here’s the strange part… my mom used to cut it up and drop it into hot black coffee. We’d scoop it out with a spoon and eat it. And It was delicious! I can admit to not having eaten it in years, but that’s not to say I wouldn’t…. know what I mean? I haven’t made mac and cheese w/hoop cheese, but seriously, why wouldn’t you? I’m definitely going to give this a try as I’m lucky enough to still be able to procure hoop cheese. Lucky, lucky me! Thank you!
Stacey
Super interesting! I hope you’ll get to try this!
Dee331
I am so glad to see a macaroni and cheese recipe that is like the way I was taught to make it. We never baked ours & canned milk was always used & we only used longhorn cheddar. I do love it, so maybe others might try this too.
Stacey
We just LOVE it this way!
Judy
I put it in the microwave for a bit and it melted with a little clumping, we still ate it, it’s good cheese! only thing I can figure is that after I drained the pasta I put it in a serving bowl not the pot it was boiling in. Maybe that makes the difference? Anyway, my goof, still good food! I enjoy your site!
Stacey
Thanks, Judy! Yep, putting it back in the pot is key because of the residual heat. Try that next time and I bet you’ll get a better melt from that cheese. Glad you enjoyed it anyway!
Judy
I found the hoop cheese but it didn’t melt! what did I do wrong? 🙁
Stacey
I’m guessing there wasn’t enough heat to melt it. What happened? Did it eventually melt or what?
Barb A. J.
I read on your post everything needs to come to room temperature before cooking so everything blends together better. Might help the cheese to melt better.
Susan
re: a baked version … I grew up with hoop cheese as well … and I bet if you poured the mac & cheese into a baking dish, crushed up some butter crackers (ritz or townhouse), and sprinkled on top then put in the oven at about 350 for maybe 10 or 15 mins (just until it browns a bit) it would be really good.
Just throwing it out there 🙂
Stacey
Sounds great!!
Virginia David Moore
Stacey, you have taught this great-grandmother a new word. I grew up in Texas, lived in Idaho 24 years and now live in Florida. Nowhere have I ever heard of hoop cheese! I know Edam and Gouda cheeses have a red rind and I wonder if these are called hoop cheese in Alabama. The foods in different geographic areas are very different. For instance, nobody we knew in Idaho had ever heard of black-eyed peas or fried okra!
They had a deprived life, didn’t they? 🙂
Stacey
Isn’t that funny? Well, hoop cheese is a big deal down my way, but it’s not really like any other cheese.
Paul
I know that this is an old post but do you have a recipe for a baked version of this?
Stacey
Hi Paul! Unfortunately, I don’t. My grandmother always did it on the stove so this is the only recipe I have that’s like this.
Denise
Using food amounts in recipe….Boil the noodles. Grate the hoop cheese. I mix mine with grated sharp that I grated. . Not the pre_grated because it makes it powdery. Save some cheese to cover the top. In a baking dish, put the cooked noodles over the cheese and stir really good to melt cheese some. Then stir in evap milk ( enough milk to that it slightly covers the top of noodles, 2 eggs and 1 egg white that are beat well before adding them, salt and pepper. Sprinkle on remaining cheese, cover with tin foil and Bake on 385 for about 45 to 1 hour. it will not look brown but If you want it browner, broil it for a few more min without tinfoil. Keep watch!!! Take out oven and let settle for 10 min. Ur main goal is to cook the egg and milk, and melt the cheese in this dish so some pple dont cook it so long. Its trial and error but it shld not be runny after sitting for 10 min.
Debrah Warren
Sounds just like the way my grandmother used to make mac & ch when I would go and stay with them. It brings back the best memories.The only difference was she baked it. does anyone know about it being baked? We have red rind cheese here in our little southern town still.
Roslyn Jordan
I was looking for a vermont white cheedar in Walmart and in the gourmet cheese case were blocks of Hoop Cheese! I started screaming be cause I had not seen it in years! Walmart of all places!!
Nancy
Your Nana’s mac and cheese recipe is the first homemade version, other than my mom’s, that I really want to make. Her recipe involved making a roux and it just seemed like a little more work, but yes, it was the best!! I don’t know if hoop cheese is a commonly sold cheese now, but I use a white sharp cheddar cheese in my recipe. Is this a good substitute? Also, does the evaporated milk give the recipe a special flavor?
Thanks for sharing your recipe and also your memories!
Stacey
Nancy, you are so sweet! If you’re going to use a sharp cheddar, you may need to add a little butter as the hoop cheese has a higher fat content. THe milk doesn’t affect the flavor as much as it just makes it very creamy. Enjoy!
LeAnn
On rare occasions my Dad would cut slices of hoop cheese & place in a small cast iron skillet. He melted the cheese in the oven to serve with homemade biscuits & ribbon cane syrup that came in metal cans at the grocery store. YUM! YUM! I can still see the melted cheese stretching long threads as we scooped the cheese out of the skillet onto each half of a biscuit; then topping it all off with the thick, stretchy syrup.
We also made cheese toast as you mentioned, but again spread the top with syrup.
The cheese nor the syrup tastes the same today as back then, but what does?!
Stacey
LeAnn, Thanks so much for sharing that memory! And you’re right, nothing tastes as good as then!!
Janet Ward
We call that cheese “Longhorn Cheese” here in Texas….good recipe that I will definitely try. Thanks for sharing.
Stacey
Whatever you call, it sure is good! I hope y’all enjoy it!!
Faith
Looks similar to Colby cheese.
Lori Brown
My husband used to get a Hunk of Hoop Cheese, a cold Pepsi (glass bottle) and a sleeve of Saltines from Trew’s Grocery in Delano,TN..
We moved to Delano last August and the store is still standing, but no longer in business 🙁
Stacey
Sounds like the perfect lunch to me!!
Jessica
If you can’t find the hoop cheese- you might try the Cracker Barrel version that is typically available in most grocery stores, or so I assume. However, I live in the South, so I’m not 100% sure what is readily available further north. It always stuns me when I go into a restaurant expecting to get what I always do only to find out that it’s a regional thing and I’m not in my region! Also- one of the other reasons (besides the giant boxes of brownie mix) I love wholesale clubs like BJ’s- they always have the most interesting cheese selection. Now I have something else to add to my grocery list!! Thanks!
<3–J
Janet
Yes, we have Craker barrel way up here in Michigan! It melts great.
Stacey
Awesome!!
Debbie Strum
OK, Stacey…now you have me wondering what your grandfather’s recipe for cheese toast was! LOL Or are you saving that for a future post? ~hint,hint~
Sandi
If I can’t find hoop cheese can I subsitute regular chedder? Mild or Sharp? This recipe for mac and cheese sounds awsome and I would love to try it out.
Stacey
Absolutely! The type depends on your preference. I would suggest the sharp kind to most closely mimic the flavor of the hoop cheese. I’d also suggest cutting the cheese a bit smaller. Hoop cheese is pretty soft and melts pretty quickly. Regular cheddar is a bit harder and cutting it smaller should help it melt more quickly.
Jackie @Syrup and Biscuits
Stacey.
My grandparents never had a meal that didn’t include slices of hoop cheese. I haven’t seen it in a long while. If I walked in a grocery store and saw it like you, I would probably break down and cry. Thanks for the story, Stacey!
Stacey
I just love the stuff. The fun part as a kid was to be able to slice the cheese up and steal a few pieces in the process. 🙂 I found it at a new locally owned place. They said they intend to keep it in stock. Yea!
Linda Studdard
When I’m next at Katherine’s, let me know where I can get some. The local source in Jacksonville where I grew up was Weaver’s Grocery. I worked part time for Mr. Weaver’s wife in her dress shop and she would send me across the square to get some hoop cheese and crackers for our “snack break” accompanied by a Co-cola in a bottle.
Stacey
Will do! And I know all about some Co-Cola!
texas gal
Go to your local meat market or butcher shop….maybe they sell it. Here in Tx we call it rat cheese…because we would take a bit of it & set rat traps with it. Or sometimes called brick cheese….also check deli shops.
Mary
I work in an old fashioned store and we have hoop cheese. We cut it, wrap it and sit it in baskets on the counter. Customers love it and so do I. It is really good cold or room temp with a honey bun. Come to South Georgia and I’ll hook you up.
Stacey
I’m totally game for that!!
Sabrina
Stacey, I love your stories, too. They remind me of my childhood & all the good times we had that didn’t require a lot of money, just someone’s time. I LOVE hoop cheese, too. I am definitely going to try this recipe. Your pics of the mac & cheese look awesome! Wish I had a big bowl of it now!!!
Stacey
Thanks, Sabrina! I love it when my stories bring back memories for y’all too!
Kelli
I love your stories. I can so see you with him in the store as a little boy:) Funny the thing you remember from childhood. I bet it is not at all the things they expected you to remember:)
Stacey
Thanks! I do have such fond memories! Memory is an amazing thing.