Sharp & Spicy Pimento Cheese (& Grandmama!)
If you’re on Pinterest or Facebook, I’d sure love it if you could use one of those buttons above. Thanks so much!
Pimento Cheese (pronounced pub-men-uh) is a staple in the Southeastern United States – and also in the Philippines. Clearly, this speaks to the wonderful taste of those folks (love y’all!). It’s one of those things we had often growing up and sometimes you just get a hankering that nothing else will satisfy except a good old pimento cheese sandwich.
There are a couple of ways to make pimento cheese but the main two involve sharp cheddar (like this recipe) and Velveeta (click here for the velveeta version). Both are delicious in my book. However, at a photo shoot for Taste of the South last weekend, we had wheat crackers and a big old tub of spicy pimento cheese. It was so heavenly that I decided to come home and whip some up to show folks how to make it, just in case you didn’t know. Because not having a little spicy pimento cheese from time to time would be a crying shame. As if I needed another excuse, I got to go visit my Grandmama this past weekend and she loves pimento cheese so it was the perfect little treat to take to her.
A little about Grandmama
My Grandmother is the cute smiling lady in that photo above. She is my mother’s mother and she and I have a lot of things in common. Chief among those commanlities being that she is the only person I know that I can call at 4:00 AM to have a chat and cup of coffee with over the phone. She’ll answer the phone “Hellloooo! I’m just a sitting here having me a little coffee.” I’m pretty sure I’m the only person who calls her at this hour. We enjoy our little conversations when we get to have them – and every now and then I send her a tin of coffee as a thank you.
There is something very comforting knowing someone else who gets up as early as I do. No matter how early I get up, I know my Grandmama has likely beat me to the punch.
Grandmama is a joy to talk to because she is the kind of person who always looks on the bright side. I’ve never once seen her get frazzled. I think that living through the depression and growing up as poor as she did acts as a common sense buffer to life. While the rest of the world is running around shouting that the sky is falling, Grandmama remains even keeled, dependable, and always encouraging.
My goal is to be like her
I want to be like her when I’m gray and I’m sure a lot of others feel the same way. But you know what? You don’t just magically turn sweet, kind, and wise when the clock flips over to 65 (Remember, I had 13 living grandparents when I was born, so I got to see contrast here!).
We have to start working towards it now. It’s important to practice looking for joy, especially when other folks are looking for something to complain about. You have to learn to value loving people over judging them, and be more concerned with what is right than being right. These are just the beginning stepping stones but when you seek out things like this in life, wisdom follows. Many of my grandparents walked this path to end up the kind and wise people they were in their older years. I do my best to follow in their steps. I want to be wrinkled and gray, with an easy smile and twinkling eyes and arms strong as an ox surrounded by folks who want hugs from them. That’s a destination worth reaching, so for me, it’s a path worth taking.
Come to think of it, my grandparents who ended up sweet, kind, wise, and loving, all ate pimento cheese on a regular basis. Now I’m not saying this had anything to do with it but there’s no sense in taking any chances – so let’s get mixin’!
You’ll need: Mayo, sharp cheddar, cayenne pepper, pimentos, and some hot sauce.
Note: I always like to point out for the folks who don’t love mayo that I don’t either, so don’t fret over it in this recipe. You really won’t taste it because the cheddar cheese, sauces, and pimentos really overshadow it. We mainly have it in there to hold it all together.
I also like to point out to the folks who are horrified at the thought of a Southerner not liking mayo that I’m a ninth generation Alabamian. My people having lived here long before it even became a state, and in addition to not liking mayo, I also don’t like seafood. I’ll just share in your horror and admit that I have no idea why they haven’t kicked me out of the South over such atrocities but I realize I’m living on borrowed time 🙂 If anyone would like to step up and offer their state as refuge, I’ll gladly consider it and offer numerous baked goods should I ever become your new neighbor 🙂
Grate all of your cheese and put it in a large mixing bowl.
Add drained pimentos and mayo.
Stir that up really good.
Add cayenne pepper and hot sauce and stir again until well blended.
Place this in a covered container and refrigerate several hours, or overnight, to allow flavors to marry.
Note: This is an arranged marriage, some might even say forced. I’m okay with that because these ingredients are far too young to know what is best for them so I, as their guardian, have chosen the best possible partners. Of course, this will lead to their eventual demise, but t’will be a noble way to go.
The next day, take all of that pimento cheese along with some zesty dill pickle spears and kettle chips to your Grandmama’s house.
Make a sandwich on some nicely toasted bread. Try to take a picture of it without getting any of your nephew’s legos in the shot.
Give up, because your nephew has too many Legos… decide it would look better with Grandmama holding it anyway.
Ahh, that’s better 🙂
Ingredients
- 1 pound block Sharp Cheddar Cheese*
- 1 cup mayo
- 1 teaspoon Cayenne Pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons hot sauce
- 7 ounce jar pimentos drained
Instructions
- Grate all cheese and place in large mixing bowl with mayo and pimentos. Stir well to mix.
- Add hot sauce and cayenne pepper. Stir until well combined.
- Cover and refrigerate several hours or overnight. Serve on toasted bread, plain bread, or your favorite crackers.
*Can use pre-grated cheese if you prefer
Nutrition
“You can often change your circumstances by changing your attitude”
~ Eleanor Roosevelt
Submitted by Jackie. Submit your quote by clicking here.
Came across your site in Alabama Living magazine. Made the pimento cheese recipe first and it was delicious! Have found more recipes to try! Keep ’em coming.
Thanks for posting this recipe. There is nothing like homemade Pimento Cheese! My mom always made it and I make it too. It is funny how people just gobble it up and have no idea you can make “Homemade Pimento Cheese”! It tastes a lot better than store-bought and it is better to grate your own cheese. I tried the pre-grated and it wasn’t as good.
Lovely recipe, great story. Reminds me of my own maternal grandmother whom I miss dearly. She has been gone many years, but hardly a day goes by that she doesn’t come into my kitchen through one of her cherished recipes. I have shared yours to my FB page and thank you for the memories and a delicious recipe!
Isn’t it wonderful that we can still visit with our loved ones through the foods they used to cook for us?! Thank you for sharing Betty…Happy Cooking!
I like spicy pimento cheese. I also put minced jalapeños in mine.
Christy, I have been making homemade pimento cheese most of my married life (37 yrs) but my husband won’t touch it so I can do whatever I want too. In season I add a little chopped peppers from the garden. I also add a little cream cheese for smoothness. lately I’ve discovered minced garlic and if not that then garlic powder. just kicks it up a little, I get bored easily with the same-o, same o. PS, I live in Meridianville- we’re neighbors !!!
Love spicy Pimento Cheese. I have to confess, however, I make mine with Cheeze-Whiz: Sorry. I just made this for my in-laws 2 weeks ago when we visited them in the FL Keys. I made one version that was spicy and topped with thin slices of Vidalia onions. Second version: If you want to kick it up a notch, cut back a bit on the hot sauce; depending on your heat tolerance. Then top it off with a few rings of Texas “The Original Sweet & Hot Jalapenos.” That’s outstanding! You can put the cheese on a cracker of your choice, top it with a jalapeno ring, and it makes a great hors d’oeuvre; or as mom used to call them, “horses doovers.” 😉
We have a running joke in our family Pimento Cheese- our family recipe for Pimento Cheese, put me off of it for years and years until I had some at a function that was made correctly-now I cannot get enough of it. By the way, I am from Alabama, I do not like Mayonnaise, seafood, chicken, or Sweet Tea. My tea has to be unsweet! I am in hiding now– I think they are looking for me 🙂
I am from Georgia, and I don’t eat the following Southern foods: Cooked cabbage, fried okra, fried squash, or fried okra. Also don’t eat turnips in any shape form or fashion. No wild game for me either. But, I do love pimento cheese.