Green Chile Mac & Cheese

Green Chile Mac & Cheese

Prep 10 min Cook 20 min Total 30 min Serves 6 servings Difficulty Easy 520 Cal Heat Medium 4.9 (86) Jump to recipe

This green chili mac and cheese takes a beloved comfort-food classic and gives it a bold New Mexico upgrade. Creamy, cheesy, and loaded with fire-roasted Hatch green chile, it's the kind of dish that disappears fast — so you might want to make a double batch. Whether you spell it green chili mac and cheese or green chile mac and cheese, it's the same five-generations-in-the-Hatch-Valley flavor we grew up on.

Mac and cheese has always had a special place at our family table, but once you stir in roasted Hatch green chile, there's really no going back to the plain version. This is comfort food with a little kick — the kind of dish that fits just as perfectly at a backyard cookout as it does on a chilly weeknight when you need something warm and satisfying.

Why Hatch green chile makes the difference

The base is a simple homemade cheese sauce — real butter, a roux, and plenty of good melty cheese — which is already a step above anything that comes out of a box. But that cup of diced Roasted Hatch Green Chile stirred in at the end is what makes it. Hatch chile, grown in the mineral-rich soil of our valley in southern New Mexico, has a smoky, roasted depth and a clean, lingering heat that ordinary canned chiles simply can't match. It pairs beautifully with the richness of the cheese sauce, and the heat level is entirely up to you — medium roasted chile for a friendly warmth, hot if you want it to bite back.

Choosing your cheese and pasta

We love a mix of Monterey Jack and sharp cheddar here, but honestly, use whatever melts well. Stick to the cheddar family — white cheddar, Monterey Jack, pepper jack, even a little gouda or gruyère — because those cheeses melt smooth instead of stringy. Avoid pre-shredded bagged cheese when you can; the anti-caking starch keeps it from melting silky. Shred from a block. For pasta, elbow macaroni is classic, but cavatappi, shells, and rotini all grab the sauce beautifully thanks to their ridges and curves.

Pro tips for a silky sauce

Cook your roux a full minute so the sauce doesn't taste of raw flour, then add your milk slowly and whisk constantly. Pull the pot off the heat before you stir in the cheese — cheese added to a screaming-hot sauce can break and turn grainy. Add it a handful at a time, letting each melt before the next. Stir the green chile in last so it warms through without losing its bright, roasted flavor.

Substitutions and pantry shortcuts

Fresh roasted chile in season is the gold standard, but our freeze-dried chopped green chile rehydrates in minutes and tastes remarkably close to fresh — perfect for a year-round pantry. For an extra layer of chile flavor, whisk a teaspoon of Hatch green chile powder right into the roux. No green chile on hand at all? Canned diced green chiles will do in a pinch, but you'll miss the smoky roast.

Serving, storage, and reheating

Serve it straight from the pot for the creamiest texture, or spoon it into a buttered dish, top with a little extra cheese, and broil for a few minutes for a golden crust. It's a hearty side for a Hatch green chile burger or a meal on its own. Leftovers keep 3–4 days in an airtight container. Reheat gently on the stovetop with a splash of milk to bring the sauce back to life — microwaving alone tends to dry it out.

One bite and you'll wonder why you ever made mac and cheese any other way.

The recipe

Green Chile Mac & Cheese

4.9 from 86 reviews
  • Prep10 min
  • Cook20 min
  • Total30 min
  • Yield6 generous bowls
  • Calories520
Easymedium heat
Made with Roasted Hatch Chile (Frozen) — grown in the Hatch Valley.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Cook the macaroni in salted water until just shy of al dente, then drain and set aside.
  2. Melt the butter in a large pot over medium heat, then whisk in the flour and cook for 1 minute to form a roux.
  3. Slowly pour in the warmed milk, whisking constantly until the sauce thickens and coats the back of a spoon.
  4. Whisk in the green chile powder, salt, pepper, and garlic powder.
  5. Remove the pot from the heat and stir in the cheddar and Monterey Jack a handful at a time until smooth.
  6. Stir in the chopped roasted Hatch green chile.
  7. Fold in the cooked macaroni until fully coated and serve hot, or transfer to a buttered dish, top with extra cheese, and broil until golden.

Pantry

Shop the chile used in this recipe

Hatch New Mexico Green Chile Powder

$9.99

Roasted Hatch Chile (Frozen)

$75.00

Freeze Dried Chopped Hatch Green Chile

$6.95

Frequently asked questions

What is green chili mac and cheese?
Green chili mac and cheese is classic macaroni and cheese folded with roasted New Mexico green chile, usually Hatch chile. The chile adds a smoky, roasted depth and a gentle, lingering heat to a creamy homemade cheese sauce, turning a familiar comfort food into a bold Southwestern dish.
What cheese is best for green chile mac and cheese?
Use cheeses that melt smoothly, like sharp cheddar, Monterey Jack, white cheddar, or pepper jack. We like a mix of cheddar and Monterey Jack. Shred from a block rather than using pre-shredded bags, since the anti-caking starch in bagged cheese keeps the sauce from turning silky.
How spicy is green chile mac and cheese?
The heat is entirely up to you. Medium roasted Hatch green chile gives a friendly, family-table warmth, while hot chile bites back. Because the creamy cheese sauce mellows the heat, this dish is approachable even for milder palates — just choose your roasted chile heat level accordingly.
Can I make green chile mac and cheese without fresh chiles?
Yes. Freeze-dried chopped Hatch green chile rehydrates in minutes and tastes close to fresh, making it a great year-round option. You can also whisk Hatch green chile powder into the sauce, or use canned diced green chiles in a pinch — though you'll miss some of the smoky roasted flavor.
How do I reheat green chile mac and cheese without drying it out?
Reheat leftovers gently on the stovetop over low heat with a splash of milk, stirring until the sauce loosens and turns creamy again. Microwaving alone tends to dry the pasta out, so add a little milk first and heat in short bursts, stirring between each.
Where can I buy Hatch green chile for this recipe?
The Hatch Chile Store ships roasted Hatch green chile, freeze-dried chopped green chile, and Hatch green chile powder straight from our family farms in the Hatch Valley of New Mexico. Roasted frozen chile is closest to fresh; freeze-dried and powder are shelf-stable pantry options.
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