Creamy Pumpkin Mac and Cheese with Smoked Gouda

This pumpkin mac and cheese recipe is a stovetop fall dinner made with smoked gouda, extra sharp cheddar, pumpkin puree, and a bacon fat roux for a velvety, deeply savory sauce that coats every noodle.

The smoked Gouda and pumpkin together produce a richly flavored sauce that tastes genuinely like fall, earthy, smoky, and warm in every bite.

Looking for more Thanksgiving-inspired recipes? ThisSourdough Cornbread Dressing Recipe as a classicThanksgiving side dish and one we make every year. Make thisEasy Homemade Pumpkin Pie Spice Recipe when you want to add pumpkin pie spice to your fall inspired dishes this season.

A white bowl of pumpkin mac and cheese with mixed yellow and green pasta in a golden pumpkin cheese sauce, topped with freshly grated parmesan, styled with two small orange pumpkins, a toasted roll, and dried baby's breath on a gold gingham linen.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

  • Bacon fat roux for deeper flavor – Starting the sauce with bacon fat instead of butter adds a subtle savory smokiness to the base that carries through every bite of the finished dish and pairs naturally with the smoked gouda.
  • Smoked gouda and sharp cheddar together – Smoked gouda alone produces a creamy, deeply flavored sauce but it needs the sharpness of extra sharp cheddar to balance its richness. The two together produce a sauce with complexity that neither cheese achieves on its own.
  • Stovetop in 30 minutes – No baking, no breadcrumb topping, no second pan. One pot for the pasta, one saucepan for the sauce, and dinner is on the table in 30 minutes on a weeknight.
  • Pumpkin puree that earns its place – A full cup of pumpkin puree gives the sauce its velvety body, its warm color, and a subtle earthy sweetness that makes this genuinely different from a standard mac and cheese rather than just a mac and cheese with orange sauce.

Ingredients

  • Elbow macaroni – One pound of elbow macaroni is the classic choice for a stovetop mac and cheese. The small curved shape holds the sauce in every bite. Shell pasta or rotini work equally well if that is what you have. Cook to al dente – slightly firm – so the noodles hold their texture when folded into the sauce.
  • Pumpkin puree – One cup of pure pumpkin puree, homemade or canned. If using canned, make sure it is plain pumpkin puree rather than pumpkin pie filling which contains sweeteners and spices. Homemade pumpkin puree from a roasted jarrahdale or sugar pumpkin has a more concentrated, slightly earthy flavor than canned and produces a deeper colored sauce.
  • Smoked gouda – One and a half cups of freshly shredded smoked gouda. Buy it in block form and grate it yourself – pre-shredded gouda contains anti-caking agents that prevent it from melting smoothly and produce a grainy rather than velvety sauce. The smokiness of the gouda is the defining flavor of this dish.
  • Extra sharp cheddar – One cup of freshly shredded extra sharp cheddar balances the richness of the gouda with a bold, sharp bite that keeps the sauce from tasting one-dimensional. Freshly grated only – same reason as the gouda.
  • Whole milk – Two cups of whole milk form the liquid base of the sauce. Whole milk produces a richer, creamier sauce than low-fat milk. For an even richer result, replace half the milk with heavy cream.
  • Bacon fat – Two tablespoons of reserved bacon fat form the base of the roux and add a savory, smoky depth that butter cannot replicate. If bacon fat is not available, unsalted butter works as a direct substitute.
  • All-purpose flour – Half a cup of flour cooked into the bacon fat forms the roux that thickens the sauce. Cook the roux for a full 1 to 2 minutes before adding the milk to ensure the raw flour taste is completely cooked out.
  • Fine sea salt – Seasons the sauce and sharpens every other flavor. Taste the sauce before adding the pasta and adjust the salt level at that point.
  • Black pepper – Half a teaspoon of freshly ground black pepper adds a mild peppery warmth that works naturally with the smoked gouda and pumpkin.
  • Cayenne pepper – A quarter teaspoon adds a gentle heat that cuts through the richness of the sauce without making the dish spicy. Skip entirely if serving to children or anyone sensitive to heat.
A hand lifting a spoonful of pumpkin mac and cheese from a white bowl, showing the creamy golden pumpkin sauce coating the mixed pasta and grated parmesan, with small orange pumpkins softly blurred in the background.

Variations & Add-Ins

  • Crispy bacon topping – Cook four strips of bacon until crisp, crumble, and scatter over the finished mac and cheese just before serving. The rendered fat from the bacon goes directly into the roux.
  • Brown butter sage finish – Brown two tablespoons of butter in a small pan with six fresh sage leaves until the butter is golden and the sage is crisp, about 3 minutes. Drizzle over individual bowls just before serving for an aromatic, nutty finish that deepens the fall flavor profile.
  • Baked version with breadcrumb topping – Transfer the finished stovetop mac and cheese to a buttered baking dish, top with a mixture of panko breadcrumbs and melted butter, and bake at 375°F for 15 to 20 minutes until the topping is golden and crisp.
  • Freshly milled flour version – Replace the all-purpose flour in the roux with an equal weight of freshly milled soft white wheat flour. The roux will have a slightly nuttier flavor and a deeper color that complements the smoked gouda. Read How to Convert Recipes to Freshly Milled Flour | Complete Guide for guidance on substitution ratios.

Recipe Tips

Grate the cheese fresh – This is non-negotiable for a smooth, velvety sauce. Pre-shredded cheese contains anti-caking agents – typically potato starch or cellulose – that prevent the cheese from melting cleanly and produce a grainy, separated sauce rather than the smooth, glossy result freshly grated cheese produces.

Cook the roux for a full minute – After the bacon fat and flour come together, cook the roux over medium-low heat for at least 1 to 2 minutes, stirring constantly. This step cooks out the raw flour taste that makes a béchamel taste starchy rather than creamy. The roux is ready when it smells slightly nutty and looks smooth and golden.

Add the milk gradually and whisk constantly – Pouring the milk in all at once produces lumps that are difficult to smooth out. Add it in a slow, steady stream while whisking constantly and the sauce will come together into a smooth, velvety base without any lumps.

Keep the heat at medium-low throughout – High heat causes dairy-based sauces to break, separate, or scorch on the bottom of the pan. Medium-low heat keeps the sauce smooth and glossy from start to finish.

Reserve a cup of pasta water – Before draining the cooked pasta, scoop out a cup of the starchy cooking water. If the sauce becomes too thick after folding in the pasta, a splash of pasta water brings it back to a perfectly creamy consistency without thinning the flavor.

Season the pasta water generously – The pasta absorbs water as it cooks and that water flavors the noodle from the inside. Properly salted pasta water is the first layer of seasoning in this dish and cannot be added back after the fact.Serve immediately – Stovetop mac and cheese thickens as it sits. Serve it the moment the pasta is folded into the sauce for the most velvety, creamy result. If it thickens before serving, add a splash of warm milk and stir gently over low heat.

Instructions

  1. Cook the pasta – Bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil over medium-high heat. Add the elbow macaroni and cook until just al dente, about 8 to 10 minutes. Reserve one cup of pasta water before draining. Drain the pasta and set aside.
  2. Make the roux – In a large saucepan over medium-low heat, melt the bacon fat until shimmering. Sprinkle in the flour and stir constantly with a wooden spoon until a smooth paste forms. Cook for 1 to 2 minutes, stirring continuously, until the roux smells slightly nutty and looks golden.
  3. Build the sauce – Gradually pour in the whole milk in a slow, steady stream, whisking constantly to prevent lumps. Continue whisking over medium-low heat until the mixture thickens into a smooth, creamy sauce, about 3 to 4 minutes.
  4. Add the pumpkin and cheese – Stir in the pumpkin puree, smoked gouda, and extra sharp cheddar. Continue stirring over medium-low heat until both cheeses are completely melted and the sauce is smooth, glossy, and deeply colored. Season with salt, black pepper, and cayenne if using. Taste and adjust seasoning.
  5. Fold in the pasta – Add the drained pasta to the saucepan and fold gently until every noodle is evenly coated in the pumpkin cheese sauce. If the sauce is too thick, add a splash of reserved pasta water and stir until the desired consistency is reached.
  6. Serve – Serve immediately in warm bowls topped with extra shredded smoked gouda or a sprinkle of black pepper. Finish with crispy crumbled bacon or a brown butter sage drizzle if desired.
A hand holding a silver spoon lifting a creamy bite of pumpkin mac and cheese from a white bowl topped with grated parmesan, with orange pumpkins softly blurred behind it on a lace doily in a cottage kitchen.

Freezing and Storage

  • Refrigerator – Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. The sauce thickens significantly as it cools.
  • Reheating – Reheat gently in a saucepan over medium-low heat with a splash of whole milk, stirring frequently until the sauce loosens and becomes creamy again. Do not microwave without adding liquid first or the sauce will dry out and separate.
  • Freezer – Store in a freezer-safe airtight container for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator and reheat on the stovetop with a generous splash of milk over medium-low heat, stirring until smooth.

FAQ

Yes, pumpkin puree works beautifully in mac and cheese. It adds body, a velvety texture, and a subtle earthy sweetness that deepens the flavor of the cheese sauce without making the dish taste like pumpkin pie. The key is using pure pumpkin puree rather than pumpkin pie filling, which contains sweeteners and spices that will make the sauce taste sweet rather than savory. A cup of pumpkin puree in a full pound of pasta produces a sauce that tastes richly flavored rather than obviously pumpkin.

Smoked gouda is the best single cheese for a pumpkin mac and cheese because its smokiness complements and balances the earthy sweetness of the pumpkin in a way that mild cheeses cannot. For a more complex sauce, combine smoked gouda with extra sharp cheddar, the gouda provides creaminess and smokiness while the sharp cheddar adds the bold, tangy bite that keeps the sauce from tasting flat. Gruyère is a worthy third option for a nuttier, more refined flavor profile.

A simple green salad with an apple cider vinaigrette is a natural pairing that cuts through the richness of the cheese sauce. Roasted vegetables – particularly roasted broccoli, roasted Brussels sprouts, or Roasted Pumpkin Seeds Recipe scattered over the top – work well. Sourdough bread for dipping is always appropriate. Crispy bacon crumbled over the finished bowl adds both texture and a savory contrast to the velvety sauce.

Three things keep this sauce creamy from pan to bowl. First, use freshly grated cheese rather than pre-shredded, the anti-caking agents in pre-shredded cheese prevent smooth melting. Second, keep the heat at medium-low throughout cooking – high heat causes dairy sauces to break and separate. Third, reserve a cup of pasta water before draining and use it to loosen the sauce if it thickens too much after the pasta is folded in. If reheating leftovers, always add a splash of whole milk and stir gently over low heat.

Yes, canned pumpkin puree works well in this recipe. Use pure pumpkin puree, not pumpkin pie filling. Canned pumpkin puree produces a slightly milder, less earthy flavor than homemade roasted pumpkin puree. If you have access to jarrahdale or sugar pumpkins from the garden or a farm stand, homemade puree has a more concentrated flavor and a slightly deeper color that makes the finished sauce look and taste more autumnal.

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A white bowl of pumpkin mac and cheese with mixed yellow and green pasta in a golden pumpkin cheese sauce, topped with freshly grated parmesan, styled with two small orange pumpkins, a toasted roll, and dried baby's breath on a gold gingham linen.
5 from 1 vote

Creamy Pumpkin Mac and Cheese with Smoked Gouda

Author: Emily Rider
This pumpkin mac and cheese recipe is a stovetop fall dinner made with smoked Gouda, extra sharp cheddar, pumpkin puree, and a bacon fat roux for a velvety, deeply savory sauce ready in 30 minutes. This is a cottage kitchen autumnal pasta dish that earns its place on the dinner table every single year.
Prep:15 minutes
Cook:15 minutes
Total:30 minutes
Course: Dinner, lunch
Cuisine: American
Servings: 8

Equipment

  • 1 Large pot
  • 1 large saucepan
  • 1 Whisk
  • 1  Wooden spoon
  • 1 Box grater
  • 1 Colander

Ingredients

  • 1 pound elbow macaroni 454 grams (or shell pasta or rotini)
  • 1 cup pumpkin puree 245 grams (pure pumpkin, not pumpkin pie filling)
  • 2 cups whole milk 454 grams
  • 2 tablespoons bacon fat 28 grams (or unsalted butter)
  • ½ cup all-purpose flour 60 grams 1½ cups smoked gouda, 170 grams (freshly grated, block form)
  • 1 cup extra sharp cheddar 113 grams (freshly grated)
  • teaspoons fine sea salt 9 grams
  • ½ teaspoon black pepper 1 gram (freshly ground)
  • ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper 1 gram (optional)

Instructions

  1. Cook the pasta – Bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil. Cook macaroni until just al dente, about 8 to 10 minutes. Reserve 1 cup pasta water before draining. Drain and set aside.
  2. Make the roux – Melt bacon fat in a large saucepan over medium-low heat. Add flour and stir constantly for 1 to 2 minutes until smooth and slightly golden.
  3. Build the sauce – Gradually pour in milk in a slow steady stream, whisking constantly. Whisk over medium-low heat until thickened and smooth, about 3 to 4 minutes.
  4. Add pumpkin and cheese – Stir in pumpkin puree, smoked gouda, and extra sharp cheddar. Stir over medium-low heat until both cheeses are fully melted and sauce is glossy. Season with salt, pepper, and cayenne if using.
  5. Fold in pasta – Add drained pasta and fold gently until every noodle is evenly coated. Add reserved pasta water a splash at a time if sauce is too thick.
  6. Serve – Serve immediately topped with extra shredded gouda, crumbled bacon, or a brown butter sage drizzle.

Notes

Grate cheese fresh – Pre-shredded cheese contains anti-caking agents that prevent smooth melting and produce a grainy sauce. Always grate from block.
Keep heat at medium-low – High heat causes dairy sauces to break and separate. Medium-low throughout produces a smooth, velvety result.
Reserve pasta water – Add a splash if the sauce thickens too much after folding in the pasta.
Serve immediately – Stovetop mac and cheese thickens quickly as it sits. Serve the moment the pasta is folded into the sauce.

Nutrition

Serving: 1g, Calories: 375kcal, Carbohydrates: 54g, Protein: 14g, Fat: 11g, Saturated Fat: 5g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g, Monounsaturated Fat: 3g, Cholesterol: 25mg, Sodium: 562mg, Potassium: 303mg, Fiber: 3g, Sugar: 6g, Vitamin A: 5033IU, Vitamin C: 1mg, Calcium: 197mg, Iron: 2mg
Close-up of a woman in a peach blouse smiling and leaning against a kitchen counter, with fresh flour and wheat berries visible beside her.

Emily Rider

Home miller since 1999 with fresh-milled flour & sourdough experience. Sharing from-scratch recipes and traditional kitchen skills, rooted in the seasons and inspired by everyday cottage living and seasonal rhythms.

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