Cheese Straws
- 1 cup butter, room temperature
- 8 ounces Parmesan cheese, finely grated
- 8 ounces sharp Cheddar or Gruyere cheese, finely grated
- 3/4 teaspoon Dijon mustard
- 2 1/3 cups all-purpose flour
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon ground hot red pepper
- Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
- Cut the butter into thin pieces, approximately tablespoon-size, and beat with an electric hand mixer in a very large mixing bowl until butter is soft.
- Add all the cheese and beat with the butter until the mixture is smooth.
- Stir in the mustard.
- Whisk together the flour, salt, baking powder, and hot red pepper.
- Add to the butter mixture and beat until combined.
- Form into a ball.
- Press dough out with a cookie press into straws, following manufacturer's instructions, or use the following procedure: Divide dough into fourths.
- On waxed paper, roll each piece into a rectangle 1/3-inch thick.
- Use a pastry wheel to cut dough into 4- by 1/2-inch strips.
- Move straws onto a rimmed baking sheet lined with a silicone mat or parchment paper.
- Bake at 375 degrees for 8 to 15 minutes, until light brown.
- Watch carefully, as overly browned straws aren't tasty.
- Cool on a rack.
- Notes: Every oven is different.
- Cook the first batch, watching carefully, and if too brown, reduce heat to 325 degrees.
- Rotate pan halfway through baking time.
- Use more than one baking sheet at a time only if the sheets may be placed in the oven without overlapping.
- Air must freely circulate or the bottoms will be burned and the tops unbrowned.
- Switch shelves and positions of the pans as necessary to prevent top or bottom from browning.
- Take care: white cheese will not brown as much as yellow.
- Once the aroma comes wafting out of the oven, they are usually done.
- Cooking further may burn the cheese.
- Remove with a metal spatula to cool on a rack.
- These keep several days at room temperature in a tightly sealed container, or frozen up to 3 months.
- Due to the heavy humidity in the South, it may be necessary to re-crisp straws on a baking sheet in a 300-degree oven.
- Variation: Use cookie cutters, a pastry bag, or an indented pizza slicer to shape cheese straws.
- Cut into coins, triangles, hearts, or specialty shapes for special parties.
butter, parmesan cheese, cheddar, mustard, flour, salt, baking powder, ground hot red pepper
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/cheese-straws-recipe8.html (may not work)