As promised, here’s the topic that received the second-highest number of votes on my recent poll: American cheese. I was thrilled that you chose this one, ’cause American cheese holds a very special place in my heart. Yes, I’m serious.

So, let’s dive in!


I sometimes think of myself as a foodie, but realistically speaking, I don’t meet the criteria for one simple fact:

I love American cheese.

No self-respecting gourmand would admit to a love affair with such a heavily processed product. For the uninitiated, like my legions of Bangladeshi readers (and any other foreign visitors) wondering what American cheese is, it’s easier to explain what it isn’t: cheese. At least technically not, according to the FDA. They call it a “pasteurized process cheese,” which must only contain a minimum of 51% real cheese. The rest can include a combination of filler ingredients like milk, skim milk, buttermilk, cream, cheese whey, and albumin.

I like to think of American cheese as a pre-sliced riddle wrapped in an enigma wrapped in plastic. But a delicious one.

When contemplating our move to Wisconsin, I was afraid my fondness for American cheese might get me banned from the state. They take this whole “America’s Dairyland” thing seriously, don’tcha know. I pictured border patrol agents stopping the car and searching for individually wrapped Kraft slices, then throwing me in The Clink.

That’s ridiculous, I reassured myself. Nobody calls it “The Clink” anymore!

Luckily, my fears were unfounded. Wisconsinites don’t turn their noses up at American cheese; in fact, some folks even embrace it. One of our favorite local cheese shops – Kraemer Wisconsin Cheese in Watertown – makes their own American cheese you can buy in a block just like your favorite cheddar or gouda. I daresay, it’s even better than Kraft!

Tara, a true cheddar snob, has never understood my obsession with American cheese. “It’s fake!” she says. Keep in mind this is the same woman who thinks nothing of topping a Ritz cracker with Cheez Whiz from an aerosol can. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black!

(Even she has come around to the Kraemer American cheese though.)

The best thing about American cheese – besides its salty, tangy flavor – is its meltability. There’s no better topping for a cheeseburger; cheddar or Monterey Jack or Swiss just sort of half-ass melts, resting atop the patty while glimmering beads of oil dot the surface. American cheese, by contrast, perfectly melts into every nook and cranny, fusing with the burger in a warm, loving embrace that’s almost sensual in nature. This is exactly why it’s the perfect filling for a grilled cheese sandwich, too. Nothing exudes more oozy, cheesy goodness!

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. My go-to Jack in the Box order was the Monster Taco, a hard shell ground beef taco topped with not one, but two, glorious slices of American cheese. That might sound like an odd combination, but Jack in the Box tacos are better than anything Taco Bell dishes up with their lame shredded cheddar. Yawn.

Don’t even get me started on breakfast sandwiches or cheese toast. If you make yours with anything other than American, I simply can’t take you seriously. This is a divide we will never bridge.

I’m proud to say I’m not the only one who loves American cheese. Food & Wine published a terrific article titled Don’t Be a Snob About American Cheese in which professional food writer Stacey Ballis “scream(s) to the rooftops my unapologetic love for American cheese,” which she calls “a brilliant food.” But my favorite line of all? “If the hypothetical people in charge of such things were to make me choose one cheese only to have for the rest of my natural life, American wins hands down.”

Thank you, Stacey. You get me.

Do you like American cheese? What’s your favorite culinary use for it?


61 responses to “An enigma wrapped in a riddle wrapped in plastic.”

  1. On a Monday morning?! What are you trying to do to me????

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Dang it, you’re onto me. I’ve adjusted my posting schedule to reflect “The Most Inconvenient Time for Ilsa Rey.” And here I thought I was being subtle!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I’ll read this LATER! Sheesh.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. I’m not a fan of the “individually wrapped slice” type of American cheese. I do, however, like the stuff sliced from the deli. I also like American cheese melted on my morning bagel. And I’m a “pepperjack on my burger” kinda gal. Lately I have been loving the Laughing Cow cheese wedges. No judging!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hey, we used to buy Laughing Cow cheese wedges all the time. No judgment here at all! My exception to the American cheese burger rule: I love a mushroom Swiss burger (my Culver’s go-to actually). Otherwise, as much as I like pepper jack, it’ll never replace American for me!

      Like

  4. Yes, I’m also a fan… but it has to be Kraft Singles! Do you know they now come in flavors (garlib herb, etc)?? With the price of singles literally tripling in the last 1.5 years, I haven’t yet splurged on the flavored, but I’ve been getting the white singles cause they’re a bit cheaper than regular.

    My primary use is 3 slices between bread.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Flavored American cheese? I had no idea. As long as it doesn’t impact the meltability, I’m in!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yeah… it looks the same (but white). I saw it on Amazon Fresh. I really want to try it!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. … its meltability. 

    This is why I like American cheese. I deplore the wastefulness of the individual plastic wrapping around each slice, but once in a while I long for how evenly and consistently it melts. Like it has one purpose in life and that is to cause me no trouble on my sandwich.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Honestly, I don’t even buy the individually wrapped slices unless I’m slumming. The higher-end Kraft singles (and of course, Kraemer) come pre-sliced in one big block. All the convenience without the waste!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I did not know that. Huh!

        Liked by 1 person

  6. While I don’t share your fondness for the orange individually wrapped slices, I do buy the white block version at the deli counter for burgers and the occasional melted sandwich.
    But I draw the line at cheese(and I use that term loosely) in a can.
    🤢

    Liked by 3 people

    1. To be fair, Tara hasn’t bought Cheez Whiz in a few years. But that doesn’t mean she wouldn’t go to town if I brought home a can tomorrow!

      Liked by 2 people

  7. American cheese was made for grilled cheese sandwiches. Which in turn were made for a side of tomato soup. I might be hungry now.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Not coincidentally, we’re having grilled cheese sandwiches and tomato soup on Wednesday!

      Liked by 2 people

  8. Sorry, Mark, but I very much hate American cheese which I’ve always called plastic cheese. It does melt well though.

    I’m a Tillamook girl through and through. I also love Beechers which is a local company and Cougar Gold, although I am an alum of the University of Washington. Don’t tell anyone!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. No need to apologize, Martha. We all have our preferences! Tillamook is good (though I do think Wisconsin cheeses are, for the most part, superior). We love Beecher’s! Used to stop by their flagship store in Pike Place Market whenever we’d visit. Their mac ‘n cheese is amazing – even frozen. Sadly, we can’t find it out here.

      Like

  9. The only place for that not-cheese is on an American cheeseburger. Somehow, Five Guys and In-n-Out make it work. But it’s pretty terrible anywhere else.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Pretty good on the burgers I cook up on my backyard grill too!

      Liked by 2 people

  10. As a kid I truly believed that a wrapped neon orange pressed flexible plastic sheet was cheese. I ate tons of it. Then I grew up and realized that cows (and even goats) make milk that turns into cheese for a reason. No judgment however, unless your skin starts to turn neon orange and also develops a waxy sheen…keep embracing your chemicals Mark 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ahh, but that’s the common misconception, and I’m happy to debunk it. Most of the ingredients in American cheese are dairy-based (milk, whey, etc.). The only “chemicals” are typically:

      1. Sodium citrate, an extremely common emulsifying salt that is used to keep the cheese creamy as it melts. It’s commonly found in club soda, ice cream, jams, jellies, powdered drinks, and wine.

      2. Sodium phosphate, an emulsifying salt that is also widely used as a leavening agent in baked goods (typically baking powder).

      That’s it! You might also see sorbic acid on the label, but that’s an organic acid used as a preservative. It’s widely used in food preparation and found naturally in various fruits and plants. This is what gives American cheese its stable shelf life, and it’s only allowed in “consumer-sized” packages of cheese. If you want to avoid it for any reason, you won’t find it in the stuff behind the deli counter.

      Truly, American cheese gets an undeserved bad rap. The reality is, ALL cheese is processed to a certain extent (some more than others). At the very least, simple cheeses are made with pasteurized milk, rennet, and/or vegetable-based enzymes. More complex cheeses are kneaded and stretched, or even washed with a bacteria-infested brine called morge.

      I understand not liking the flavor or texture maybe, but at the very least, just know that American cheese isn’t any less a cheese than meatloaf isn’t meat – which is mixed with other ingredients to form a new “product”!

      Liked by 1 person

  11. We don’t buy American Cheese. Not Kraft. Not from the Deli. We don’t buy Cheez Whiz in a can to spray on crackers (or suck straight from the can). Nor do we buy big blocks of Velveeta either.

    Our Go To is Cabot Farms Extra Sharp Vermont White Cheddar ~ great for grilled cheese, Mexican dishes, (say Nacho), Mac & Cheese, etc.

    That said, your house, your rules. If you offered me any of the above, I would dig in enthusiastically.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. As passionate as I am about American cheese, I am equally as disdainful of Velveeta. If you search my blog, you’ll find more than one anti-Velveeta tirade, I guarantee that!

      Like

  12. My personal favorite is Velveeta, that’s america cheese,right?😂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Oh, mom….you know my feelings about Velveeta. It’s not even remotely the same! 🤮

      Like

  13. American Cheese Food is best used to make a grilled cheese, especially velveeta. Although i have at times added thinly sliced real cheese between 2 slices of the cheese food and tgat is just as delish, velveeta cubes are great for mac n cheese too.

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    1. Exactly!😄

      Liked by 1 person

    2. See, I don’t consider Velveeta to be American cheese…and the internet seems to back that up. It’s close, but not quite the same. I can see using it on nachos or mac ‘n cheese, but something about the flavor and texture are off-putting to me. My mom, who inexplicably loves the stuff, can attest to that. 🙂

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      1. Well okay you’re right they are practically the same the difference being canola oil added to the Velveeta. But honestly, on my weight loss journey I don’t to eat either. Also I have had my share of Velveeta, Kraft and Generic (being cheepest) I am not partial to Velveeta it just melts fastest.

        Liked by 1 person

  14. It was definitely a household staple when I had little kids. I used it to make grilled cheese, of course! When I was a kid, my mom spread Cheez Whiz on bread to make grilled cheese. How weird is that?

    I haven’t bought it in years, but hey, you like what you like! No shame in that. I still say Redi Whip is superior to homemade whipped cream.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. OK, I can see Cheez Whiz on a Philly cheesesteak – that’s traditional – but a grilled cheese sandwich? No thanks.

      Redi Whip is certainly easier than homemade whipped cream, but Tara makes it from scratch and I prefer hers. Probably because hers is less sweet.

      Like

  15. Oh my goodness, I’ve never thought so deeply and passionately about American cheese. Thanks for enlightening me, Mark!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. By contrast, I’ve probably spent way too much time thinking about it, as you can see!

      Liked by 1 person

  16. I do like American cheese; we always have it on hand. We use American cheese for burgers and grilled cheese sandwiches. However, if I plan to eat plain cheese or have cheese and crackers, I want extra sharp cheddar.

    It’s my understanding that American cheese is extremely popular in Korea.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, totally agreed! If I’m doing cheese and crackers, it’s going to be slices from a block of superb Wisconsin craft cheese…maybe a sharp cheddar, gouda, brick, or – my favorite – a green onion jack.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I once found some amazing horseradish cheddar. I wish I could find it again.

        Liked by 1 person

  17. Even Gordon Ramsay uses American cheese on burgers. 😉

    That being said, I’m a bit of a cheese snob myself. Haven’t had American cheese in years. My go-to on a burger is blue cheese! 🙂 Feta cheese on steaks. Otherwise, aged, hard cheeses. We live right outside a huge Amish area, and the are some great cheese houses in the community.

    Carry on! I ate loads of Kraft cheese growing up. I understand the love.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I did not know that about Gordon Ramsay, but I love the validation!

      I also love bleu cheese and feta. Crumbled bleu cheese atop a ribeye steak is such a treat!

      Liked by 1 person

  18. I looooove American cheese as well, and velvet! it’s like manna from the gods. ps I also love jack in box tacos, but don’t have jib’s here anymore

    Liked by 2 people

    1. “Manna from the gods.” Clearly, you get me too! We also do not have any JIBs out here (though we do have Culver’s, which more than makes up for that).

      Liked by 1 person

  19. Margaret said what I was thinking…plastic cheese. Ick. Just ick. Meltability aside…😜

    Liked by 1 person

    1. OK, but it’s just the wrapping that is plastic! It tastes great!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I beg to differ. I stand by my “ick” appraisal. 😜

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Guess I’ll have to be content with turning you on to Spindrift!

        Like

  20. It has been decades since I’ve had American cheese (my food snobbery is showing). But I remember a slice of toast, an egg, and a piece of American cheese as being the height of culinary delights when I was in college. It does melt well. Probably because it’s not really cheese.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Haha…I mean, it’s at least 51% cheese! We primarily use a toaster, but once in awhile I’m in the mood for cheese toast, and will drag the toaster oven out of storage just to make that.

      Like

  21. Australia is quite americanised in our culture, but somewhere along the line, a politician banned those individually- wrapped slices for environmental reasons. Our CheeseGov must have been incensed. It could have been the same pollie who banned us from owning guns. Before that, ‘plastic’ cheese was a staple in my childhood home.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Can you still get American cheese sliced to order from a deli?

      I wish we’d take a step from your “pollies” (great word!) and ban guns too.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hmmm you can get the almost orange sliced cheese on Subway and Maccas burgers. And yes we have the Kraft slices at supermarkets. We buy pre-sliced cheese, but it’s vintage extra sharp and bitey flavour. It doesn’t really melt that well.

        Liked by 1 person

  22. I don’t love it, but it has its place.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. That it does: inside my fridge!

      Liked by 1 person

  23. I really enjoyed this comment section—though not as much as your blog post! 😊

    I do like American cheese! Your post actually inspired me to eat it more. I was on the chemical cheese bandwagon, but after reading the educated debate between you and Deb, I’m rethinking my relationship with American cheese.

    I’m not sure I can add it to my tacos, though…

    But I do love American cheese on pretty much everything else. I used to have a really great mac and cheese recipe with American cheese, but I lost it a long time ago. I might have to go searching for it!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Well, somebody has to defend American cheese. It might as well be me! (For as much as I do love it though, and rave about the JIB Monster Tacos, I have never once put it on a homemade taco).

      Liked by 1 person

  24. While I’m tempted to reply with scorn, and I do strongly feel that once you’ve had REALLY good cheese (French, Italian, for example), American cheese and all its imposter cousins (Velveeta) taste absolutely fake and disgusting, I cannot, for I am a lover of a plastic food as well. I’m a Twizzlers fan. There I said it (hangs head in shame).
    I think the Spam love is another disqualifier for foodie-ism, by the way.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m surprised that last sentence wasn’t written by Rivergirl!

      I have had some excellent quality cheeses in my life, both in Oregon (Tillamook) and Wisconsin (too many to name)…and despite what the current administration believes, I feel diversity is a good thing. I love the top-tier cheeses and I also love American. Each has their place!

      I used to use Twizzlers as a straw whenever drinking a Sprite.

      Liked by 1 person

  25. Fun title. Now I get it. I’m not sure I’m a snob about anything. This stuff is so convenient to slap on a sandwich. I didn’t even know it wasn’t for real cheese. Whatevs, I say!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It’s mostly real cheese. Good enough for me!

      Liked by 1 person

  26. I can’t remember the last time I had American cheese which is weird because I am American. 🤪

    It certainly wouldn’t be my first choice, but You Do You, I’m no cheese snob.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I’m sure there are plenty of Belgians who don’t eat waffles either!

      (Their loss. Belgian waffles are amazing.)

      Like

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