Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Light mac and cheese with greens: gluten-free or not' imprimido.

Receta Light mac and cheese with greens: gluten-free or not
by Julianne Puckett

Enjoy this lightened yet rich and creamy mac and cheese, loaded with good-for-you collard greens, two ways: gluten-free or not.

Eating lighter and adding veggies to your diet doesn't have to mean giving up the foods you love. Case in point: mac and cheese.

Regular readers know I'm pretty much addicted to pasta. Even though I know the carb-loading is doing nothing for my waistline, I'm powerless against the pull of cheesy, filling comfort food (seriously: I may need a support group). To make my addiction slightly less bad for me, I've been embracing healthier styles of pasta, like whole wheat pasta and brown rice pastas.

The good thing about brown rice pasta is that it's also gluten-free, which I know is an important recipe element to many of you. So, whenever I can, I like to share recipes that can be made gluten-free if needed but don't exclude those who don't eat gluten-free.

You've got a love a pasta recipe where everybody wins. So you're definitely going to love this win-win lightened mac and cheese with collard greens.

Collard greens, I hate to say, are terribly misunderstood. If you're one of those people who has only ever tried them braised (I think praising them for their "liquor" is rubbish), with the life cooked out of them so that they're a nasty, sickly green color, I won't blame you if you say you hate them. I hate them cooked that way, too.

But you've got to give them another try. Hey, I used to claim to hate pork chops, too, because the only way I ever ate them was the way my mother cooked them: dried out to the point of being inedible unless immersed in a side of applesauce because 1970s cooks worried that pinkish, juicy pork would give us worms ... or worse.

Cooked lightly, gently, or even, frankly, not at all, collards are wonderful -- gorgeously green and a bit crunchy, with a heartier flavor than kale. My favorite way to eat them is raw, sliced into ribbons in a summer slaw.

But, given that they are packed with vitamins and lots of good-for-you calcium, they are a perfect addition to your favorite pasta dishes, like macaroni and cheese.

If you need further convincing, this mac and cheese with collards is

Mr. Ninj-approved -- and, given that he has yet to meet a vegetable he

actually likes, that's saying a lot. (He didn't even eat around the collards, as he usually does when I throw in something green.) But, if you truly don't want to include collards (or can't find any), feel free to substitute kale or mustard greens.

Whether you are eating gluten-free or not, you're going to love this

rich and creamy -- yet still light and healthier -- mac and cheese. You

can take Mr. Ninj's word for it.

What's your stance on collards? Have you tried them raw? Leave a comment: The Ninj wants to know.

Light Mac and Cheese with Greens: Gluten-Free or Not

Adapted from Eating Well

If collards aren't available, kale or mustard greens make great substitutions.

Ingredients:

Directions:

Cook pasta in boiling water according to package instructions. In the last 2 minutes of cook time, add the collards and mushrooms to the pasta water. Drain.

While the pasta cooks, bring 1 1/2 cups of the milk to a simmer in a saucepan over medium heat. In a small bowl, whisk together the remaining 1/4 cup milk, flour, salt, pepper and cayenne, then add the mixture to the simmering milk. Reduce the heat and whisk the mixture constantly until thickened (only about a minute or so). Remove the saucepan from the heat and add both the cheeses and the vinegar. Continue to stir until all the cheese is melted. Gently combine the pasta-collard mixture and the sauce and spoon it into a prepared casserole dish.

Preheat the broiler. In another small bowl, stir together with a fork the bread crumbs, oil, paprika and hot sauce (add more or less to taste). Sprinkle the mixture over the pasta and broil the dish about 6-8 inches from the element until the crumbs begin to brown (this happens pretty quickly, so keep a close eye on it).

www.yankeekitchenninja.com