Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.
There's just something about a warm, gooey, cheesy bowl of mac that brings me back to the days before I had to worry about rent, medical bills, and the looming climate apocalypse.
Armed with a handful of lactose pills, I went on a quest to find the best mac and cheese the fast-food world has to offer. I ate the mac and cheese from six chains' Manhattan locations: Popeyes, Boston Market, Panera, KFC, Subway, and Chick-fil-A.
Advertisement
Each one was melty and cheesy, but only one offered a tangy and rich flavor that left its competition in the dust.
Boston Market was the only chain that sold mac and cheese with rotini noodles instead of the more traditional elbow macaroni.
It was slightly cheesier and creamier than Popeyes' mac. Mostly, it tasted like Kraft straight from the box.
The pasta was hotter and fresher, though, and the rotini worked surprisingly well. Their extra surface area and curly shape allowed for more sauce to soak in.
However, the texture was mostly just that of mush.
I enjoyed Boston Market's mac slightly more than I did Popeyes', but I wouldn't go out of my way to get it when I can just make an equivalent mac at home.
Panera hovers in the odd purgatory between fancy and fast.
Its mac and cheese was no exception. The wider, shell-like macaroni and white cheese sauce were like a cafeteria version of Annie's white cheddar shells.
But the mixture was more salty than cheesy. The pasta was predictably mushy.
The sauce was watery rather than cheesy and tasted mostly of milk and salt.
I'd take a box of Kraft over Panera's plain mac and cheese any day. However, Panera does have several loaded mac options which might taste better.
Unlike Panera, KFC has no business pretending to be healthy or fancy — so it doesn't.
And honestly, that's a good thing. KFC fully embraces its role as a purveyor of bad-for-you food that tastes good.
Its mac and cheese tastes artificial and plasticky. It also tastes pretty good.
The sauce was cheesier, denser, and slightly sweet. The pasta was mushy and very floury.
But I was surprised by how much I enjoyed it overall. Out of the four tasted I'd tasted so far, it was the most satisfying.
A new item on the menu, Chick-fil-A's mac and cheese was sold out the first time I tried to buy it.
I returned early the next day and managed to snag a cup. As soon as I took off the cap, I knew I had something special.
I've never been particularly impressed by the Chick-fil-A items I've had in the past, but this mac and cheese was a different story.
It was tangy and rich with the taste of real cheese and heavy cream.
The texture was also great, with the mac being less mushy than most and the baked cheese adding extra variety to each bite.
Out of all the macs and cheese I tried, Chick-fil-A had the best bowl by far. Subway, which was second-best, didn't even come close. Chick-fil-A's mac tasted homemade, like it'd been made from scratch and pulled fresh from a grandma's oven. (Not my grandma — she's also lactose intolerant.)