Vincent Price’s Supper Casserole (macaroni and cheese and spam)
Vincent Price’s Supper Casserole (macaroni and cheese and spam)
by Shotgun_Mosquito
10 Comments
SaladNeedsTossing
Nothing says “internationally-known Gourmet” like including microwave cooking instructions in a recipe.
Cool_Cartographer_39
Scariest thing he ever did
PiRhoNaut
I mean… Spam and Mac & Cheese is actually really good. I’m not going to say it’s fancy or subtle, but it’s pretty tasty.
icephoenix821
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#Creamettes, the way Vincent Price likes it! ##*VINCENT’S SUPPER CASSEROLE* 7-oz. package Creamettes® macaroni (2 cups dry) 12-oz. can luncheon meat ¼ cup butter ¼ cup flour ½ teaspoon salt ½ teaspoon dry mustard 2 cups milk ½ lb. sharp Cheddar cheese Parsley or green pepper
Prepare Creamettes macaroni according to package directions. Slice and cut luncheon meat into squares, reserving a few slices. Arrange macaroni and squares of luncheon meat in 2 quart casserole pour on cheese sauce. (For sauce: melt butter, blend in flour, salt, dry mustard; stir in milk; cook over medium heat, stirring until thick, add cheese, shredded, stir.) Top with slices of luncheon meat. Add parsley or green pepper for color. Bake in 350° oven 20 to 25 min. Microwave: “Cook” cycle, uncovered for 8 min.
Good cooks know their ingredients. For example, spaghetti and macaroni. Some come from soft, starchy wheat so that’s the way they taste. Creamettes uses only hard, lean wheat so Creamettes never stick together or taste starchy.
Vincent Price internationally-known gourmet, among other things.
imoverhere29
A spam recipe with a 1/2 tsp of salt added… just in case you didn’t get enough salt from the can o spam! Too funny. Vincent was cool though.
KindergartenBullshit
I don’t know about this recipe but my in-laws swear by that brand’s elbow macaroni. They still bitch to this day, that they can’t get it anymore here in PA. I get it, my lost ingredient is Lem pie filling & pudding, that shit was goat.
wowugotit
Gotta try this for a fun, comfort-style, dish some evening!
BethanyForDistrict9
Spam is actually pretty great.
camelbuck
Mr. Price also curated and lent his name to a line of fine art that was sold through Sears. The artwork included works by Picasso, Reubens and Georgia O’Keefe.
10 Comments
Nothing says “internationally-known Gourmet” like including microwave cooking instructions in a recipe.
Scariest thing he ever did
I mean… Spam and Mac & Cheese is actually really good. I’m not going to say it’s fancy or subtle, but it’s pretty tasty.
*Image Transcription: Advertisement*
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#Creamettes, the way Vincent Price likes it!
##*VINCENT’S SUPPER CASSEROLE*
7-oz. package Creamettes® macaroni (2 cups dry)
12-oz. can luncheon meat
¼ cup butter
¼ cup flour
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon dry mustard
2 cups milk
½ lb. sharp Cheddar cheese
Parsley or green pepper
Prepare Creamettes macaroni according to package directions. Slice and cut luncheon meat into squares, reserving a few slices. Arrange macaroni and squares of luncheon meat in 2 quart casserole pour on cheese sauce. (For sauce: melt butter, blend in flour, salt, dry mustard; stir in milk; cook over medium heat, stirring until thick, add cheese, shredded, stir.) Top with slices of luncheon meat. Add parsley or green pepper for color. Bake in 350° oven 20 to 25 min. Microwave: “Cook” cycle, uncovered for 8 min.
Good cooks know their ingredients. For example, spaghetti and macaroni. Some come from soft, starchy wheat so that’s the way they taste. Creamettes uses only hard, lean wheat so Creamettes never stick together or taste starchy.
Vincent Price internationally-known gourmet, among other things.
A spam recipe with a 1/2 tsp of salt added… just in case you didn’t get enough salt from the can o spam! Too funny. Vincent was cool though.
I don’t know about this recipe but my in-laws swear by that brand’s elbow macaroni. They still bitch to this day, that they can’t get it anymore here in PA. I get it, my lost ingredient is Lem pie filling & pudding, that shit was goat.
Gotta try this for a fun, comfort-style, dish some evening!
Spam is actually pretty great.
Mr. Price also curated and lent his name to a line of fine art that was sold through Sears. The artwork included works by Picasso, Reubens and Georgia O’Keefe.
That’s weird.
(saves recipe)