This Alfredo sauce can be made in about 10 minutes and then stashed in the fridge or freezer until you need it. Reheat and toss with pasta, veggies, or anything that could use a little saucy, cheesy assistance to make it delicious.
Video: Easy Make-Ahead Alfredo Sauce
Mornay Sauce Is Bechamel With Cheese!
If you’re feeling fancy, you can call this Alfredo sauce by its classic French name: mornay sauce. If you’re feeling even fancier, you can explain to your adoring dinner companions that a mornay sauce is just a bechamel to which you’ve added a generous amount of cheese. And what is a bechamel but a roux-based sauce made with butter, flour, and milk. Of course.
How to Make Alfredo Sauce
If this all sounds slightly intimidating, don’t you fret. Making this Alfredo sauce is one of the easiest, most doable recipes ever. Here’s how to make Alfredo Sauce in four easy steps:
Tips for Making Easy Alfredo Sauce
People are often intimidated and unsure how to make Alfredo sauce. This is an easy recipe, but here are some tips for first-timer success!
When you first start whisking the warm milk into the roux, it will clump up and look an awful lot like you’ve made a horrible mistake. Never fear – those clumps will thin out as you continue adding the milk. First, they’ll take on the consistency of mashed potatoes, then pureed cauliflower, and then a sauce. Just keep calm and carry on adding the milk a little at a time while whisking.Also, don’t wait for the milk to thicken up completely before adding the cheese since the cheese will thicken it even more. You want to add the cheese just at the point when the milk is thick enough to coat the spoon and the sides of the pan in a thick milky layer. If you’re starting to wonder if it’s time to add the cheese, it probably is.If the sauce seems too thin after you’ve added the cheese, just let it simmer for a few more minutes on low heat until it’s as thick as you like. Conversely, if the sauce seems too thick (either now or when you’re warming it back up again), just whisk in a splash of milk, broth, or water to thin it out again.Don’t limit yourself to just using Parmesan for this Alfredo sauce recipe. You can really use any cheese you like – cheddar, Swiss, gruyere, gouda… You get the idea. Use the best quality, and best tasting, cheese you can find. It’s the main ingredient, so it makes a big difference in the tastiness of your finished sauce.
Alfredo Sauce That Perfectly Reheats
The real magic of this easy Alfredo sauce is that it reheats so well. So many cheese sauces are prone to separating into gritty cheese and puddles of greasy liquid when reheated, but not this sauce. The flour in the roux makes this a very stable, very reliable, and a very forgiving sauce. The Alfredo sauce will harden into a thick paste once it cools in the fridge, but give it a few minutes of gentle heat on the stovetop or in the microwave, and it will once again become silky and creamy. If you see a few little beads of fat starting to form, just whisk vigorously to blend them back in. You can also freeze this Alfredo sauce for up to one month. Let it thaw overnight in the fridge before reheating on the stovetop or in the microwave.
Ways to Use This Easy Alfredo Sauce
What to do with your cheesy Alfredo sauce? Oh, let me count the ways. You can toss it with pasta, bien sur. Use fettuccine if you’re craving fettuccine alfredo, or elbows if you want mac and cheese. The sauce is also great spooned over steamed vegetables, baked potatoes, fish and other seafood, or chicken. I’m getting hungry just thinking about it. Good thing I still have a few jars stashed away in my fridge. Happy cooking, everyone!
More Favorite Italian Recipes!
Fettuccine Alfredo Lasagna Bolognese Spaghetti Pasta Carbonara Fresh Basil Pesto Pasta Puttanesca
Swap out the Parmesan for any favorite cheese to make your own version of this cheese sauce. For a garlicky alfredo sauce, saute 1 to 2 cloves minced garlic with the butter before adding the flour. You can use 2% or skim milk for this recipe, but the sauce will be thinner. This recipe can be scaled up to make larger batches. Just keep the ratios of flour, butter, milk, and cheese the same. Continue to cook the roux, whisking constantly, for 1 minute. This cooks off the raw flour flavor. It’s ok if the roux turns a golden color, but continue immediately to the next step if it starts to brown significantly. Continue adding the milk in small 1/4-cup increments, whisking continuously. The clumps will eventually smooth out and look like mashed potatoes, then a thick puree, and then a sauce. Once it looks like a sauce, whisk in any remaining milk. This step should only take about a minute. You can move through the phases fairly quickly. You can cook it a little longer, whisking occasionally, to let it thicken a little more if you like, but it’s better to err on the side of a too-thin sauce at this point. It will thicken a bit more when you reheat it. Transfer the sauce into a small saucepan or microwave-safe bowl. Gently warm over low heat, or in 30-second bursts in the microwave, until warmed. Stir occasionally, or between every 30-second burst in the microwave. It will start off very thick and paste-like, but will soften and return to a sauce as it warms. If the sauce seems too thick, whisk in a splash of milk, broth, or water until the sauce is as thinned as you like.