Grilled Cheese Sandwich

Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Rikki Snyder for The New York Times
Total Time
15 minutes
Rating
4(2,942)
Comments
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The trick to making the best grilled cheese sandwich isn't just in the ingredients (mayonnaise and butter, together at last). It's also on the stove. Achieving a golden, crusty outside and oozy inside takes a little patience: if the heat is too high, the outside will scorch before the cheese melts. Cooking the slices separately at first gives the cheese a good head start. There’s no need to search out artisanal loaves or local cheese (though they won’t hurt), but definitely do not use homemade mayonnaise. Mustard, chutney or even strawberry jam (believe it) can be dabbed on the cheese as it melts, or add ham, prosciutto or slices of apple or tomato (drain on paper towels first). You can use any melting cheese, such as American, Muenster or Swiss, but not too much: part of the perfection here is in the proportion of bread to cheese.

Featured in: A Field Guide to the American Sandwich

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Ingredients

Yield:1 sandwich
  • 2slices bread, either soft sandwich squares or large peasant-style slices, not more than ½ inch thick
  • Butter
  • Mayonnaise
  • 1 to 2ounces grated cheddar (or other cheese), depending on size of bread
Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Heat a heavy pan over medium-low heat.

  2. Step 2

    Thinly spread one side of each bread slice with butter. Spread the other side of each slice with mayonnaise and place the bread, mayonnaise-side-down, in the pan. Divide the cheese evenly on top of the buttered slices. Adjust the heat so the bread sizzles gently.

  3. Step 3

    When the cheese is about halfway melted, use a spatula to flip one slice over on top of the other, and press lightly to melt. Keep turning the sandwich, pressing gently, until the sandwich is compact, both sides are crusty, and the cheese is melted.

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Ratings

4 out of 5
2,942 user ratings
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Comments

Since mayonnaise is made mostly from oil and salt, it makes sense to use it as the cooking medium for a stovetop sandwich. If you cook it in butter, the bread will tend to burn before the cheese is melted.

- Butter not mayo
- Cheddar cheese or don't bother
- If you really want the cheese to melt, when the sandwich is open, put a glass lid on the pan. It'll heat the cheese better from the top-down.

Why does the sandwich need to be greased inside and out? What purpose does the butter on the cheese side provide? Isn't the cheese fatty enough to carry its own weight and melt without the additional? I'm no cardiac surgeon, and I do love both butter and mayo -- but what does the mayo do? Why no butter on the outside, and that's that? Can someone be kind enough to explain this technique to me.

add more about the toppings on grilled cheese like peppers

I need info for a project this did not help the wordle was easy (dryer)2/25

Agree that mayo on the outside is an excellent innovation! Here's another trick: I have a Cuisinart toaster oven that came with an air fry basket. I found that a perfect grilled cheese is achieved by air frying the sandwich (with mayo on the outside of the slices, as directed). The cheese gets melted and the outside gets nicely browned, all in about 2 minutes. You can flip it over if you want to, in case the bottom didn't brown to your liking. Thanks to NYT for the tip of using grated cheese.

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