9 Ways to Make a Better Grilled Cheese
A good grilled cheese is one of lifeâs simplest and most indulgent pleasures. Itâs got a low ingredient count; all you need is bread, cheese, and some sort of fat, but those variables can all be manipulated to create very different sandwiches.
Iâm a classic white bread, butter, and American cheese bitch, but I will admit there is a time for sourdough, or perhaps a little havarti (which melts quite well). But beyond swapping out basic bread and cheese for something a little bougie, there are other strategies you can employ to up your grilled cheese game.
I like the cheeses on the inside of my sandwich to be soft and melty, but the hard crystal-flecked parm has its place (on the outside):
The qualities that make parmesan, cheddar, and other hard cheeses like them so poorly suited for the
inside
of a grilled cheese are what make them so well suited for the
outside
. Because of their low-ish pH, these cheeses tend to grease out and congeal, rather than melt into a soft, creamy blob (which is what you want in between your bread). But when placed on the outside of a sandwich, the fat inside the cheese renders, frying the proteins and leaving behind a lacy network of crispy, salty, fried cheese. Itâs
frico
, except itâs stuck to bread.
Learn how to make one here.
Purists will argue this is a pickle melt, but they cannot argue with the fact that spreading some dill relish inside a hot grilled cheese sandwich gives it a greasy spoon kind of edge over its un-relished cousins:
From a flavor perspective, it makes a lot of sense; acid does help cut through rich flavors, keeping your palate from getting saturated, and letting you enjoy even more gooey, melted cheese. I tested the theory, using dill relish, and I must admit I enjoyed my pickled grilled cheese immensely. The sandwich had a decidedly diner vibe to it, and I really did appreciate the sour, salty note provided by the relish. It may not be a true âgrilled cheeseâ by everyoneâs standards, but itâs a damn good sandwich. (I plan on trying this with chopped cornichons next; I expect it will go well.)
I tend to favor American, havarti, and other fairly high-pH cheeses for my grilled cheese sandwiches, simply because I like my cheese to melt. But sometimes a hard cheese has better flavor. Instead of trying to force a harder cheese to melt evenly (something not in its nature), you can shred them and suspend them in cream cheese:
You see, if you do it right, you donât even realize the cream cheese is there. Itâs main role is to suspend harder, shredded cheeses and facilitate a super even and creamy melt, a method Stockwell picked up from the delightful
Cowgirl Creamery Cooks
Â
(which also advocates the use of three different cheeses):
For the creamiest middle possible, one of those three cheeses should be a soft fresh cheese. Soft cheese âacts as a suspension; just as egg whites suspend the heavier particles in a soufflĂ©, so does the soft cheese suspend the grated cheese and distribute it more evenly across the bread.â
If you want to go a little mad scientist, use melting salts (and an immersion circulator) to create a cheese slice that melts like American but tastes like cheddar:
Sodium citrateâwhich weâve used before to make
silky smooth nacho cheese sauce
â and sodium hexametaphosphate are additives known asâmelting salts,â which manufacturers use to keep oil and proteins from separating as cheese melts. (If youâve ever melted some cheddar, youâve seen the oil run off and pool; melting salts prevent this.) To get the melting salts incorporated into your cheese of choice, youâre going to need to melt, mix, and reform. This is most easily accomplished using an immersion circulator, but you can also
rig your own sous-vide like cooker using a beer cooler or on the stove
.
See the full recipe and procedure here.
The outside of a dinner roll is already browned, and thus not a good candidate for grilling. But, if you turn the roll (or several rolls) inside out, their fluffy, white exteriors are exposed, and that stuff absorbs butter like a dream, and is perfect for grilling:
Just slice them in half, keeping as many together as possible (like we did for
these sliders
) and flip the slices around. Place your cheese of choice inside the two inside out halves, slather the fresh new outsides with butter, and grill as usual. (I find this works particularly well with Kingâs Hawaiian rolls, especially if you smash them down real forcefully with a spatula.)
Why add texture to just one side of your bread when you could increase the crunch and browning with a tiny bit more grilling?:
The best method Iâve ever seen for making a perfect grilled cheese comes from
Adam Kuban
. His secret? Grill the bread on both sides. Thatâs right. Grill two slices of bread in butter, flipâem over so that the browned sides are facing up, add your cheese, and close your sandwich so that the cheese is sandwiched between the browned surfaces. Not only will this get you better tasting bread infused with more butter, but itâll also give your cheese a head start on getting extra-melty.
An everything bagelâs shape and seasonings make it a poor candidate for grilling, but again, turning the bread inside out gives us something to work with:
Inspired by the inverted grilled cheese sandwich situation at
Sadelleâs
in New York, Tasting Table recommends cutting a chewy everything bagel in half, flipping it inside out, stuffing it full of American and Muenster (or maybe
a little cream cheese
?) and grilling it up, keeping all of those tasty seeds and spices inside, where they may mingle with gooey, glorious cheese. Simple, easy, and super delicious.
In true Meathead fashion, Meathead Goldwyn of AmazingRibs.com cooks his grilled cheese sandwiches on the grill, and was nice enough to share his process with me:
Whateverâs in multiples in the cheese bin. I taste my way around the cheese department; Iâm always buying interesting cheeses. I usually start with a cheddar, and we keep sliced Swiss cheese and Colby and pepperjack, and I might make a mishmash of all of âem. I also prefer to
grill
my grilled cheese. I mean, come on now. Itâs called âgrilled cheese,â and youâre talking to Meathead here. I love to make it on a nice thick Texas toast, and I use mayonnaise on the exterior, and I cook it on the grill, just right on top of the grill and flip, flip, flip. It gets golden with a couple of good grill marks and has a little smoky character. Itâs delicious. I have a gas grill right outside my back door and my back door is just a few steps from the kitchen. So itâs no fuss, no muss; just fling open the door, toss it on the grill.
You know I love a good mayo hack, but cooking a grilled cheese sandwich in mayonnaise instead of butter is not one of them. You can read my full screed against the practice here, but to sum it up:
I want to like it. In theory, it makes sense, and I want to believe that mayo is some sort of miracle condiment that makes everything it touches better. Mayoâs higher smoke point gives the cheese more time to melt (which I have never needed), and it does crisp up nicely, but it just doesnât taste like a grilled cheese. Melted butter tastes good. Melted mayonnaise tastes like greasy nothing. Give me butter. Give me flavor.
If you prefer mayo because it spreads easier, or if you forgot to set out some butter to soften, I have an elegant solution:
Thereâs a very easy way to butter your bread with straight-from-the-fridge butter: Just melt it in the pan first.
This is actually how my stepmom
butters all her breads
, but it works extremely well with a grilled cheese. Take a tablespoon or so of butter, melt it over medium-low heat, then place a piece of bread in the pool of butter and swirl it around to coat. Remove it from the pan, set it aside (butter side up), and add a little more butter to the pan before adding your next piece of bread. Swirl that piece around in melted butter, add your cheese slices, then place the first buttered slice (butter side up) on top of the cheese. Cover the pan for a minute to help any harder cheeses melt (if you have insisted on using them), and fry and flip until both sides are golden brown.
Claire is Lifehacker's Senior Food Editor. She has a B.S. in chemistry, a decade of food journalism experience, and a deep love for mayonnaise and MSG.
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