The things that you can do with bread and cheese.
What I will write will sound like blasphemy to many, but I say to you, it is not blasphemy, but a new covenant between God and our taste buds. “What is this new covenant” you ask? In this new covenant, we put away our skillets and non-stick frying pans and cook the way all bachelors were meant to cook: with a toaster oven. Toaster ovens are versatile and very forgiving. Treasure them and treat them well.
The basic principle of comfort food is that it should be comforting to your palate, comforting to your stomach and comfortable to make. Slaving over a stove is not my idea of comfort. So, to paraphrase George Orwell, stoves bad toaster-ovens good. Toaster ovens can produce
Depending on the surrounding conditions, one may have to trade off comfort in preparation with comfort in taste. This means that there are times when it is appropriate to use processed, sliced cheese. This, again may seem like blasphemy to you, but part of the good news I am spreading is about how to mitigate the processed, plastic taste.
1. The key to making sliced cheese taste edible is partly a matter of what bread you use and what brand of cheese you buy. Some sliced cheeses taste like regurgitated chalk. Others are even edible straight from the wrapper. I use Bon Apetit. It is very reasonably priced, it tastes okay and it is made with non-animal rennet.
2. What bread do you use? Don’t bother with fancy sour-doughs if you are using sliced cheese. Of the standard kinds of sliced bread that you can buy, don’t use white bread either. Go for a wholemeal or a soft-meal type. As you can see blow, I use Sunshine soft grained wholemeal. It is soft enough to eat without toasting, it absorbs margarine well, and it does a decent job of masking the plastic taste of sliced cheese while at the same time providing a bit of contrast to enhance the cheesiness. I’ve found that white bread does not go well with sliced cheese especially when it comes to the artificial after taste.
Making any kind of grilled cheese sandwich in a toaster oven is a 6 stage process. In what follows, I will describe the 6 stage process in detail for the basic grilled cheese sandwich (with sliced cheese) and then briefly describe what changes to make when making variants.
The basic grilled cheese sandwich
Stage 1: Spreading the bread
1.1 Take 2 slices of bread and on each slice, spread butter/margarine on only 1 side. As far as you can spread evenly and do not leave any square centimetre of bread unspread.
Stage 2: Heating the bread
2.1 Remove the tray from the toaster oven. You will heat your bread directly on the oven grill.
2.2 Place your bread on the grill buttered side up and turn the toaster oven on.
2.3 Bread, spread with butter or margarine goes through a series of stages when it is heated. Initially, the margarine looks opaque on the bread. After some time, te margarine starts to melt there seems to be a semi-transparent layer on the bread. Continue heating the bread and the margarine soaks in. At this point, the surface of the bread is the softest and the most moist. Now is the best time to move to stage 3. If you continue to heat the bread, the surface will become less moist. and gradually harden. Eventually, the bread will dry up and start to brown. Usually, by this time it is too late to move to stage 3. Any sandwich you have will taste terrible. Take out the bread and have dry toast. This is your punishment for leaving the bread in there too long.
3. Placing the cheese
3.1 Take a slice of cheese, and place it on the buttered slice of bread at the center. If you are not used to working with toaster ovens, take one slice out, carefully place the cheese in the center. Ensure that there are no folds in th cheese. Place the slice of bread back in the oven. The oven need not be switched off during this stage. But you can do so if it will make you feel more comfortable.
4. Melting the cheese
4.1 Sliced cheese initially looks like a flat rectangular sheet with sharp edges. When the cheese melts, initially, the edges of the slice will start to become rounded and the whole slice may take on a slightly molten look. Very quickly, the cheese will completely melt. You know it has completely melted when the cheese looks that it has sunk into the bread. The edges are much fuzzier. Quickly move to stage 5 at this point. If you continue to wait, the cheese will start to expand until it balloons out. Now, it is too late. The cheese has already dried up. The cheese will start burning soon and the sandwich will taste like salted chalk. And it will be all your fault.
5. Closing the sandwich
5.1 Take the other slice of bread and place it buttered side down onto the cheese.
6. Finishing
6.1 At this point the sandwich may be at varying degrees of crispiness, depending on how punctual you have been at moving to each subsequent stage. Because you have not spread anything on the outer surfaces of the sandwich, the bread is liable to brown very quickly. Keep the sandwich in the toaster oven until it has reached the level of brown-ness that you desire. I have found that a light-medium brown works best for me. When done, take out and serve. You have a sandwich which is crispy on the outside and juicy and cheesy on the inside.
Basic principles
Our aim is to obtain a cheese sandwich which is juicy inside and crispy outside. We don’t want something too soggy or too dry. That is why it is essential that the inner surfaces be buttered, the cheese be done just right and the bread be done just right as well. It is also essential that all the ingredients be at hand and our actions prompt and efficient. Fortunately, the Toaster Oven is a forgiving God and you have some margin of error.
Why would you want to go for sliced cheese instead of grated cheese? There may be days when grating the cheese is just too much effort. You don’t want to wait for the cheese to thaw. Sometimes your grilled cheese sandwich craving is not that strong. Sliced cheese is enough to satisfy you. God is great and recognises all sorts of exigencies. For every kind of cheese sandwich need, He provides.
Alternatives
For those with sensitive palates, the standard cheese sandwich with sliced cheese may still taste too artificial. For such people, in order to get mask the after taste, I recommend light seasoning be added in stage 1 to just one slice of bread on top of the butter/margarine.
a. Garlic granules
b. Masterfood’s Cajun seasoning (whether or not it really tastes Cajun, in adds a decent after taste)
c. Crushed pepper
d. Oregano, Basil, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme (Also by Masterfood’s. Though McCormick’s will do just as well)
e. Some combination of a, c and/or d
Or alternatively, if you want something less subtle, on one side of the sandwich, instead of spreading butter or other fat of your choice, you can spread a mint and coriander chutney or a tomato chutney
Real Cheese
Of course, there are times when sliced cheese is not enough. We want the real thing. In such cases, thank God and His Invisible Hand* that sliced cheese is not the only kind of cheese. Make the following changes
1.2′ Prepare the cheese. i.e. transfer from the freezer to the fridge to slow thaw it out. Grate the cheese. You will likely need at most as much cheese as you can hold in the palm of one hand. A note on the choice of cheese: If you are going to us any kind of pesto sauce or chutney, don’t use mild cheeses like mozzarella, mild cheddar, Monterey Jack or Leicester Cheese. go for medium or strong cheeses like Scottish Mature Cheddar.
3.1′ Take the primary slice out of the toaster oven and spread the cheese on to the bread the same way you would do for pizzas, casseroles and macaroni and cheese. Cover as much of the bread as you want. Do not be too sparse. Do not put too much cheese either. If you put too much, not all of it will melt before the other slice of bread dries up. 2 layers of grated cheese should be sufficient.
4.1′ When you initially place the cheese, individual strips of grated cheese are clearly defined and separate from each other. Their edges are sharp. As the cheese melts, it will look like individual strips have been welded together. Wait for it to melt until it is one uniform mass of cheese, the individual strips having completely melted into one another.
The most awesome sandwich
If you are going to take the time to use grated cheese, then you might as well also use olives and dill chips. The most awesome cheese sandwich that I have made has a sun-dried tomato pesto, with garlic granules and some basil instead of margarine for the primary slice of bread. I use grated Scottish mature cheddar. I haven’t really experimented with different types of bread as often as I would like because I don’t make my super awesome sandwiches often enough to justify buying a whole loaf of gourmet bread. What are the changes to be made to the ritual?
1.1″ Take 2 slices of bread and on each slice, spread butter/margarine on only 1 side. Take one of the slices and spread the sun-dried tomato pesto on top of the margarine. This is your primary slice. Sprinkle garlic granules and basil flakes on top of pesto side of the primary slice.
1.2″ Grate Socttish mature cheddar about a handful. Prepare 3 olives sliced into 3 each such that you get 9 slices. Prepare 4 dill chips. Make sure to drain the vinegar and olive oil from the dill chips and the olives. No one like a wet spot whether it is in your bed or your bread.
3.1″ Take the primary slice out of the toaster oven. Arrange th olives evenly in 3 rows and 3 columns. This creates 4 quadrants. Place one dill chip in each quadrant. Then spread the cheese on to the bread the same way you would do for pizzas, casseroles and macaroni and cheese. Cover as much of the bread as you want. Do not be too sparse. Do not put too much cheese either. If you put too much, not all of it will melt before the other slice of bread dries up. 2 layers of grated cheese should be sufficient.
Alternative:
Chilli and onions. No pesto, no other condiments.
flatbread
Making the super awesome sandwich takes a lot of effort. If you want something less tiring, you can use flat breads like pocket-less pita breads or mini pizza crusts.
1.1”’ spread margarine along the edge of the flat bread. This will produce a thin crispy glaze. If you want to go for the white pizza taste, use margarine for the rest of the flatbread. If you want to go for something more pizza flavoured, spread the tomato pesto all the way from the center to inner edge of the margarine. You should have one large circle of tomato pesto surrounded by a ring of margarine.
1.2”’ Place all the ingredients, cheese, olives, dill chips in whichever order one wants. I haven’t noticed any difference in taste. I usually place the cheese last so that the other ingredients don’t fall out. Season with Sage, Oregano, Thyme, Rosemary, Basil, Garlic and Crushed pepper. Do not exceed the inner ring of tomato pesto. if you are using a margarine base, just leave a ring of crust.
2.1”’ Place in toaster oven and heat until cheese completely melts and crust has formed a nice golden brown glaze. Fold in half if you want a calzone.
*Of course I worship the Market; I’m a libertarian. What did you expect? Besides, the Market creates value where there was none (creation ex-nihilo via positive sum interactions). It knows all and transcends the capabilities of our individual minds (information aggregation), It provides us our daily bread and helps those who help themselves. It redeems our personal sins by transforming private vice into public virtue.
You freeze cheese?Report
Sure. I’ve got a two-pound block of English white cheddar in my freezer right now; I’ll thaw it out when the two-pound block I’m using now is gone. That’ll be some time early next week, after trying out (buttered rather than margarined) versions of Murali’s sandwiches.Report
Does freezing it change the texture? That has always been my fear.
You can freeze bread. It makes a slight difference in the texture, but if you’re toasting it anyway, you won’t notice. You can defrost slices one or two at a time by simply taking them out an hour or so ahead or popping them in the microwave. Good way to save money, especially as a bachelorReport
Oh I freeze bread, it certainly tastes better frozen then toasted than it does refrigerated. It would just never occur to me to freeze cheese, it lasts long enough that I’ve eaten it long before it goes off and by then I’m probably going to the shop for something else anyway.
As for the rather bizarre debate going on about grated versus ready sliced, has no one considered getting a kitchen knife and cutting a slice? Seriously if you cannot slice your own cheese you probably shouldn’t be allowed near kitchen implements.Report
Well, if you are looking for the types of slices ideal for a sandwich, you’d need a large block of cheese AND it could prove difficult to get the uniform thickness. Deli slicers really are a great tool, though are impractical for most home chefs. At the Italian restaurant I used to work at, we cut almost all our pizza toppings on it, plus the fresh mozzarella (which can be a real bitch to cut).
If we’re just talking about cheese and crackers, you don’t even need a fancy knife to appropriately cut that. But if you want sandwich cheese? That’s another story.Report
I wouldn’t freeze cheese unless I was going to cook with it. Moister cheeses don’t do well frozen.Report
Yeah. It keeps way past its use date. I also keep bread in the refrigerator.Report
There are things that happen to bread when you freeze it and things that happen to bread when you keep it in a quality breadbox. Refrigerating bread allows both things to happen to the bread at once.
If you don’t have a decent breadbox, you deserve one.Report
Yah, too humid in the fridge for bread to sustain.
Although if you’re a bachelor, it’s hard to get through a whole loaf, so there’s that.Report
I’ve two issues with this.
First of all, margarine. You generously allow for use of either/or but your pro-margarine bias is evident. I’ll return the gesture from the other side of the aisle: if you want to use partially hydrogenated cottonseed oil instead of actual butter for whatever reason, vive l’difference. But I say, butter. Yes, you get cholesterol in butter. But margarine brings trans fats and unsaturated fats. IANAD, but my impression is that trans fats and unsaturated fats are relatively worse for cardiac health than cholesterol — both will kill you, but unsaturated fats will kill you faster. And butter unquestionably tastes better and at least where I’m at, pound for pound it’s less expensive.
Second, your eye is on the correct prize: a nice crispy browned outside with a moist, warm, melty inside. But this isn’t a grilled cheese sandwich. It’s a toasted cheese sandwich. Perfectly fine to make a toasted cheese sandwich. Call it what it is, is what I’m saying.
Now, a suggestion for a change-up. Havarti cheese. You can get it sliced at the deli counter of most supermarkets and some manufacturers are selling sliced havarti in packages. You’ve never had a cheese that combines creaminess with tanginess like this. Three cheers for the Dutch, that they have given world cuisine this velvety marvel that makes the perfect cheese sandwich.Report
You can get it sliced at the deli counter of most supermarkets and some manufacturers are selling sliced havarti in packages
Deli counters which slice cheese for you is still a bit of a rare good in Singapore. You tend to find it in places where a lot of white people tend to live. (Probably because that’s where the demand is) but I’ll look out for pre-packaged kinds.
Regarding butter vs margarine,, I am not wedded to any particular version. I just use margarine (olive oil not cottonseed. It contains fewer transfats) just because I always have. As far as my experience goes, butter is difficult to spread especially when you take it straight out of the fridge. So basically, it’s ease of use and habit.Report
The Butter Dispenser. (There’s an example here: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Original-All-White-Butter-Dispenser-made-USA-/300585014837#vi-content )
Turn the crank and the butter comes out in a ribbon. Even if it’s fresh out of the fridge, it comes out smooth and spreadable. (Or put cream cheese in there. I’m not going to tell you how to live.)Report
That’s a shame. Havarti is usually too soft to grate easily. It will slice, but my skills with a cheese this soft are such that my slices come out a bit on the thick side.Report
Or try this for soft butter. You can keep it on the counter and doesn’t go bad
http://www.butterbell.com/Report
Actually, the general consensus is that unsaturated fats are good for you, and that the problem with butter is the saturated fat, not the cholesterol. That said, the anti-saturated fat consensus is weakening a bit at the seams, and there’s some evidence that n6 polyunsaturated fats are bad for you on the margin because they overwhelm the limited amounts of n3 fats in the typical American diet.
All that said, most mid- to high-end modern margarines, including the brand in Murali’s picture, are made with a process that does not produce trans fatty acids, and many incorporate n3 fats to balance out the n6 fats.
Still, anything that pretends to be butter but isn’t is an abomination unto God.Report
While I love a good grilled cheese–generally velvetta on rye-I do prefer me some BLT love over that. Or perhaps one of each.Report
So given that Singapore has gotten a reputation in the States over the last few years as something of a Hipster Foodie Paradise, the fact that we have a post from a Singaporean proudly proclaiming the virtues of plastic-wrapped cheese melted on toast made in a toaster oven…..well, that’s nothing short of spectacular.Report
Hipsters are the guys who can their own vegetables right? I get the foodie part because you can really find a lot of different foods from various ethnic groups fairly easily in singapore. I don’t get the hipster part.Report
I previously said that hipsters were people who pronounce “Bon Iver” “Bon Eee-vare,” but another, equally accurate test of whether someone is a hipster is whether they have ever had a heated discussion about what citrus fruit tastes best in a kale smoothie.Report
This, basically. I should also clarify that the use of the term “Hipster” was directed at the Americans obsessed with discussing Singapore’s culinary superiority rather; it was not directed at the cuisine itself.Report
I hate hipster douchebags!Report
You put dill-flavored potato chips on your sammich?
(swear, that’s honestly what I read it it as. I blinked and reread)Report
The potato chip sandwich is something that one does not speak of in polite company.Report
Lots of things to love about this post.
First off, I think you capture the essence of basic comfort food. I am of mixed feelings on the trend toward making gourmet comfort food. I’ve had some fantastic renditions of traditional dishes. But there also seems to be a disdain for going old school. Sometimes I don’t want 19 types of goat cheese, herbs I’ve never heard of, and a bread made within 12 feet. I want something that tastes the way it tasted growing up. That is often where the comfort comes from… harkening back to fond memories. So I appreciate your willingness to start at the foundation and to build from there.
Secondly, toasters… YES! My first ever “foodie” memory was when I saw my mom make grilled cheese by toasted bread and then putting cheese on it and popping it into the microwave. CHEESE SHOULD NEVER BE MICROWAVED! NOTHING YOU WANT CRISPY SHOULD EVER BE MICROWAVED! I threw down right then and there and told her my grilled cheeses would always be made in the toaster… NEVER the microwave. Again, you are bringing me back… hmmmm…
Third, I personally find that the improvement that grated cheese offers is not worth the effort and the cleanup. There are plenty of quality pre-sliced cheeses (Cabot and, as much as I hate to admit it, Cracker Barrel make high quality pre-packaged cheese… only basic ingredients). I will usually opt for the deli slicer if I want a basic American, but if I’m going for cheddar, these brands are often better than what the deli man has.
Fourth… well, I’ll save the fourth for a separate comment… it deserves its own space…Report
So, there are a couple of local New Jersey food items that I think I should share with the world.
The first is a diner stable (probably native to the entire NY Metropolitan area): a Happy Waitress. A Happy Waitress is grilled cheese with tomato and bacon. It seems so simply. But it is amazing. It is perfect drunk food and perfect hangover food, which tend to be the only times one would find himself in a NJ diner.
The second are the “Fat Sandwiches”, made famous by the Rutgers University food trucks. These guys sell there wares late at night to drunk kids and have made a fortune by throwing whatever you can throw into a deep fryer onto a hero loaf and serving it. They all have obscure names (Fat Moon, Fat Darrel) and the specific combinations sometimes vary from vendor to vendor. But an example of one would be a hero roll with chicken parm, mozzarella sticks, and french fries. They’re amazing. And they’re the reason that the terrorists hate us.
Anyway, one summer I was living at home waiting for my new apartment to be ready and I regularly hit the bar and then the diner. Two friends would travel with me and we embarked upon a plan to somehow mash-up these two things. Each night we visited the diner, we’d add one more element to the Happy Waitress. First it was simply grilled cheese with tomato, bacon, and ham. Then we added sausage. Then we upgraded the base from grilled cheese to a patty melt. Soon chicken fingers and mozzarella sticks found their way on. French fries rounded the sandwich out and after 8 long weeks, the monstrosity was complete. It became an official unofficial off-menu item at the diner and was dubbed the “Horny Waitress” by the staff. It was amazing.
A few weeks later, some friends came to town for my birthday. We hit the bar, hard, and then hit the diner. Horny Waitresses all around. One guy puked at the sight of it. Two more couldn’t believe such a thing existed (they were Massholes who had no concept of late night food). All of us gobbled them down and immediately regretted ever having meet each other.
The point of the story, I suppose, is there there is no wrong way to make grilled cheese. If you have crispy bread and warm melty cheese and you like the taste, ya done good, kid.Report
I fully support your spreading the Good News about the Happy Waitress and the RU Grease Trucks, with their various “Fat” sandwiches. This is essential to Jersey’s plan to take over the world by killing it off with heart disease; delicious, delicious heart disease.
What I do not understand is how the word “Fat” does not appear in your own late night sandwich name.Report
Well, we didn’t name the thing. So there’s that. And I’m not sure if the Greeks at the diner were personally familiar with the RU Fat Sandwich.
Fait Waitress would probably be more apt, but Horny Waitress is just so much more fun!
I actually spread the fat sandwiches north to Boston when I was in college. The dining hall was open for “Late Night” which only served that which could be fried and quickly dished out. For a few weeks, my friends and I managed to score the sandwiches, which were not only delicious but a bargain because we were charged a sandwich price ($6) instead of what the individual components would have cost. Eventually the dining hall caught on an ixnayed the whole deal. And that became my second biggest gripe with the Catholic Church.Report
But Horny Fat Waitress is both apt AND fun!Report
I could see a drunken ordering of a fat waitress going horribly wrong…Report
This makes me unhappy.Report
I apologize.Report
In a shallow dish I pour equal parts malt vinegar and olive oil, dip the cheese bread for a little extra flavor. One of those guilty pleasure things that happens twice a year.Report
By the way, when do we start talking about tomato soup? The former chefs at my job made the best tomato soup I ever had. They were supposed to teach me the recipe but got replaced over the summer before doing so. ARGH!Report
This brings back some fond memories. Before microwaves came along, I spent seven years in an apartment that didn’t have a stove. I managed quite well with a toaster oven, hotplate, and electric frying pan. The electrical system was a 15-amp job from 1923, so only one appliance could be used at a time unless I unplugged the refrigerator. Making dinner for company was a major league operation.Report
I have to ask… What would you make for company, given that setup?Report
I think they’ve since turned this exact scenario into a competitive cooking show on Food Network.
You should sue.Report
I like the basic grilled cheese sandwich but, I’d try its alternatives too.Report