Homemade Baked Mac and Cheese That Kids and Adults will Love

Who doesn’t love Mac & Cheese?
I mean, I guess people who don’t like cheese… but I try not to think about those kinds of people. (I’ve met a few) I feel like cheese can bring people together, especially in this out of control world we live in right now. I mean, my daughter practically lives off cheese sticks. Who doesn’t want something cheesy, melty, salty, and oh-so-gooey — especially when paired with noodles!

This recipe is perfect for busy nights when you need something comforting but easy, or when your dinner plans suddenly change — like mine did tonight. I was all set to make enchiladas with leftover rotisserie chicken… but when I went to grab it, it had mysteriously disappeared. (Thanks, husband!)
Luckily, I had just gotten my grocery order, and Mac & Cheese was the next best (and maybe even better) option.

I feel like everyone has their own way of making Mac & Cheese, and I’ve tried it all — different cheeses, different noodles, adding chicken, bacon, vegetables… you name it.
Tonight’s version turned out so good I had to share it. I started with an online recipe but ended up adjusting quite a bit. And honestly? It’s my favorite one yet.

Ingredients for Mac and Cheese

  • 1 box of pasta (elbows, shells, or whatever you love)
  • 1 stick of butter, divided in half
  • 1/4 cup flour
  • 2 blocks of cheese, shredded.  (This time I used cheddar, and Gouda…. But use what you have or enjoy)
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Fresh grated of nutmeg (optional, but highly recommended)

Ingredients for Crumb Topping

  • 1 cup crushed crackers (like Ritz, I used one stay fresh pack)
  • 1½ cup panko breadcrumbs
  • 1Tbsp Italian Seasoning
  • 1/2Tbsp Paprika
  • Remaining 1/2 stick of Butter

Instructions for Cheesy Goodness

(Side note: I always ask myself if I should label this “Instructions” or “Directions” — I guess either works, but “Directions” makes me think of driving somewhere and I promise you don’t need a GPS to find the ingredients you need for this.)

1. Boil the Pasta
Boil your noodles in salted water until al dente.
Remove from heat, strain, and set aside.

2. Make the Cheese Sauce
Melt half a stick of butter in a Dutch oven or other oven-safe pot.
Once melted, whisk in the flour.
Cook over medium-low heat for 4–7 minutes. (I like mine a little darker for a nuttier flavor.)



Lower the heat and let the béchamel cook while you grate your cheeses.

(Fun fact: A béchamel is one of the “Mother sauces” of the culinary world! — you’re basically a pro now!)

3. Add the Cheese
Bring the heat back up slightly (medium-low).
Add your shredded cheese a few handfuls at a time, stirring gently after each addition.

Season with salt and pepper to taste.
(If you have white pepper, now’s the perfect time to use it — no black specks!)

4. Secret Flavor Hack
Grate a little fresh nutmeg into the cheese sauce.
It adds a cozy little umph! (I learned this from Good Eats with Alton Brown — he even keeps nutmeg in his pocket!)

5. Assemble
Taste-test the cheese sauce — quality control, obviously!
Pour the sauce over your noodles in a baking dish, or stir the noodles directly into the Dutch oven if you’re using one.

6. Make the Crumb Topping
Melt the remaining half stick of butter in the microwave.
Crush your crackers (this is a super fun step for kids!).
Mix the crushed crackers and panko into the melted butter.
Add a sprinkle of Italian seasoning and paprika.
Stir to combine.

7. Bake
Sprinkle the crumb mixture over the top of the Mac & Cheese.
Bake at 350°F for about 30 minutes, or until the top is golden brown and the sides are bubbly.

Final Thoughts on this Mac

And there you have it — cheesy, cozy perfection.
Honestly, this might be my favorite way to make Mac & Cheese yet. Perfect for a weeknight dinner, a cozy Sunday meal, or anytime you just need a little cheesy happiness.

If you try it, let me know how it turns out! (Bonus points if you add bacon… just saying.)

The Guilt of Wanting a Break from Motherhood

Is Break even the Right Word?

Because as soon as I say break, I feel the guilt rise, my heart drop, and a twinge of sadness creep in—for even wanting to be away from my baby. How could I possibly want time apart from the person I created? The one I longed for, dreamed of, and, at times, suffered to bring into this world.
How can I want to step away when she looks at me and smiles, or laughs, or yells out Mama?

I find myself feeling jealous of my husband.
He gets to wake up and shower—alone.
Get ready for work—alone.
Make breakfast—alone—without a toddler pulling at his pant leg or needing to balance a baby on his hip to stir eggs with one hand.
He drives an hour to work and an hour back—alone.

I remember those days—headed into the city, music on, or maybe a true crime podcast in the background. Alone in the car. Some days I hated the commute. But most days? I appreciated it. It was time to decompress—especially on the way home. I could get out my daily frustrations with music blasting or by diving into the twisted world of Ted Bundy.

These days, my commute is from my daughter’s room to the living room and kitchen.

It’s listening to Wheels on the Bus 1,000 times (in a row), while she asks me to switch to a different version 15 seconds in. It’s teaching her that crayons are for coloring books—not the floor.
It’s eating the rest of the mac & cheese she didn’t finish (or gave to the dogs). I still get some of my music, but only if her mood allows it. Will she want Post Malone today? (Honestly, most likely—she’s loved him since she was tiny.) Or will it be Bounce Patrol singing about the alphabet and animals? No true crime podcasts or TV unless it’s during nap time—and we’re down to one nap a day.

After the third or fourth meltdown—over something small, like not opening a cheese stick fast enough, or because I had the audacity to sit on the toilet without her in my lap—I feel myself needing a moment to myself. But those moments are rare. Even showers aren’t guaranteed “me” time. We don’t have a tub, so most nights I end up showering with her. Sink tubbie time? Exhausting. (She’d stay in there for hours if I let her.)

Lately, my husband has had to travel for work. I’m happy for him—these are great opportunities.
But I’d be lying if I said I didn’t daydream about being the one to go. A solo trip, even for a day. A hotel room. Takeout. Trashy TV. Maybe a sleeping pill and eight uninterrupted hours of sleep—something I haven’t had since pregnancy. (At no fault to my husband). But then comes the guilt.

How could I spend 24 hours away from my entire world? I’ve never even spent a night without her—not since the day she was born. But still…I need a break. Or… do I?
Is break even the right word?

Some space? Yes.
To not be needed for a little while? Absolutely.
To not have to think? Even better.

But Break feels harsh.

Merriam-Webster says a break is “to separate into parts with suddenness or violence.”
Yikes. Not exactly what I meant.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/break

I haven’t touched a thesaurus in years, but I looked. I found “pause,” which already feels better.
Even “hesitate” pops up—and funny enough, that word fits too. Because every time I think about taking a break… I hesitate.

https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/break#thesaurus-entry-1-5

I probably haven’t looked at a Thesaurus in years. Can you think of the last time you did? I appreciate how it gives a list of the ways you may use the word break. I felt like a pause, was already a better word than break. I also find it funny that the word hesitate comes up. Because every time I think about a “break”, I also find myself hesitating.

Still, none of the words seem to really fit.

Because let’s be real: as moms, we’re usually the default parent. We carry the mental load.
And if your household is anything like mine, sometimes the only “break” in your day is a solo shower—if you’re lucky. So when those rare, extended moments of silence come? They feel like a breath of fresh air. Maybe breath is the word I’m looking for.

Yesterday, I texted my husband and said that when he got home, I needed time alone.
I wasn’t in the right headspace—after a full week of solo parenting—to show up for him and our daughter. I told him I needed a little trip to the store. Alone.

He immediately responded: “When you get back, you can shower alone too.”

It wasn’t a spa day. It was still a chore. But just knowing I could wander the aisles aimlessly? That I wouldn’t have a toddler screaming from the cart or trying to bolt toward the bananas? That I could just exist, by myself, for a bit. That was everything.

What I really need is just a moment of peace. To clear out the clutter in my brain. To exist outside of motherhood, even if just for an hour or two. Because at the end of the day, I’m more than just a mom. I’m more than just a wife. We all are. We are our own, individual people. Maybe unwind is the right word. Or reset.

Break feels too negative. I don’t want to escape my family. I don’t want to be away from my daughter. Break just doesn’t fit the emotions I actually feel. I don’t want to escape my family. I don’t want to be away from my daughter.

I just need a rest.
A pause.
An exhale.

So I can ground myself—and come back better.
A better mom. A better wife. A better me.