401(k) calculator How to talk money 🤑 America's Top Retailers Best CD rates this month
FOOD
Kraft Heinz

On Mac and Cheese Day, a look at how Kraft’s blue box became a pantry staple

National Mac and Cheese Day is July 14. For many, the dish is synonymous with Kraft Mac and Cheese. Brought to market amid the Great Depression, Kraft's boxed dinner has evolved over the years.

Portrait of Mike Snider Mike Snider
USA TODAY

Mac and cheese is a comfort food that rarely fails to please. With National Macaroni and Cheese Day landing on Sunday, it's a good time to salute the heavyweight champ of boxed mac and cheese: Kraft Mac & Cheese.

The idea of combining pasta with cheese dates back to 160 B.C. Rome, according to food site Epicurious. The earliest known recorded recipe bubbled up in Northern Europe in 1769, a few decades before President Thomas Jefferson served it at a state dinner in 1802, Smithsonian Magazine has written.

In 1914, the J.L. Kraft & Bros. Co., which eventually became Kraft Foods, built its first cheese manufacturing plant and made 6 million pounds of cheese to feed soldiers during World War I.

During the Great Depression, Kraft introduced its boxed macaroni and cheese, a meal for four costing 19 cents, Smithsonian Magazine wrote. Originally called Kraft Dinner (and it's still called that in Canada) when it came out in 1937, the product sold 9 million boxes in its first year on the market, Kraft Heinz says.

Kraft Dinner, the brand of mac and cheese sold in Canada by Kraft Heinz.

Blue Bell ice cream:Company's limited edition flavor has a chocolatey cheesy finish

As the first dry packaged dinner on the market, the company said, the boxed dish became "a hearty substitute for many during the rationing of meat and dairy during World War II," the company said in a statement to USA TODAY. Sales in 1943 surpassed 50 million packages, according to Kraft Heinz.

"It was a cheap way to feed a family, became massively popular, and mac and cheese has been a comfort food staple ever since," Bon Appetit noted in an October 2023 ranking of boxed macaroni and cheese (it fared well but didn't come out the winner).

These days, Kraft Heinz Co. says it produces more than 1 million boxes a day.

“For over 85 years, Kraft Mac & Cheese has been there through through every stage of our fans’ lives," said Ashleigh Calderone, Kraft Heinz' senior brand manager for Kraft Mac & Cheese. "With each bowl of creamy, cheesy noodles, we’ve offered them reassuring comfort and familiarity when they need a reset."

Here's a look at some major moments for Kraft Mac & Cheese.

1954: Kraft Macaroni & Cheese gets its iconic blue box

Originally, the product's box was mainly yellow, but nearly two decades in, the food company changed to blue, according to Nexstar Media Group.

Kraft brand macaroni and cheese boxes are shown in a store in Fairfax, Virginia on September 18, 2008.

2006: Kraft makes more modes of mac and cheese

As Kraft Macaroni & Cheese continued to dominate, the company began making spinoffs, including an organic mac and cheese and individual mac and cheese serving bowls (just add water, microwave, and add the cheesy sauce).

A box of Kraft Macaroni and Cheese is pictured in Burbank, California, on May 4, 2009.
Kraft macaroni and cheese products are seen for sale at a store in Manhattan, New York, U.S., April 29, 2016.

2016: Kraft changes mac and cheese recipe

The foodmaker said it wasn't bowing to consumer pressure when it announced plans to replace synthetic colors in the food with colors made from natural sources such as paprika, annatto and turmeric.

"Our loyal fans told us they don't want their Kraft Mac & Cheese to look or taste different," Kraft spokeswoman Lynne Galia told USA TODAY at the time. "We've worked hard so the new recipe will have the same look and taste that people know and love from the iconic blue box."

2020: Sales of Kraft Mac & Cheese rise during COVID, dip when SNAP took a hit

During the COVID-19 lockdown, sales of Kraft Mac & Cheese boomed. Some folks even ate it for breakfast, Business Insider reported.

More than half of parents (56%) said they served their kids mac and cheese for breakfast more than in the past during lockdowns, the company found in a survey of 1,000 parents in summer 2020. So Kraft Heinz offered a limited-edition Kraft Mac & Cheese "Breakfast Box" in early 2021.

“A Kraft Mac & Cheese breakfast is a win-win for families at a time when they need all the wins they can get,” Kraft Heinz brand manager Kelsey Cooperstein said at the time.

Kraft Heinz put out a limited-edition Kraft Mac & Cheese "Breakfast Box" in early 2021 when it found parents were serving mac and cheese to kids for breakfast during the COVID lockdown.

But earlier this year, Kraft Heinz saw a dip in mac and cheese sales in the last months of 2023 as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits passed during the pandemic expired.

The company's mac and cheese business "is driven disproportionately by our SNAP exposure," Kraft Heinz CEO Carlos Abrams-Rivera said in February during a discussion with investment analysts about the company's fiscal year performance in 2023.

2022: Kraft Mac & Cheese gets new name and look

Kraft Macaroni & Cheese became Kraft Mac & Cheese in June 2022, a name change meant "to reflect the way fans organically talk about the brand," Kraft Heinz said at the time.

The product's blue box also got a makeover with a more prominent noodle smile, dripping with liquid cheese, and new bolder font with white letters instead of yellow.

Two years ago, Kraft Macaroni and Cheese changed its name to Kraft Mac and Cheese and updated its box (the previous box on the left, new one on the right).

2023: A plant-based version of Kraft Mac & Cheese arrives

In late November 2023, Kraft Heinz announced it had teamed with TheNotCompany, a Chicago startup that makes plant-based milk, burgers and other products, to create Kraft NotMac&Cheese.

The Kraft Heinz Not Company joint venture, which already had collaborated on NotCheese Slices and NotMayo, began rolling out NotMac&Cheese through early 2024 in the U.S. and continues its international expansion.

NotMac&Cheese comes in two flavors − original and white cheddar − and replaces dairy with ingredients like fava bean protein and coconut oil powder.

NotMac&Cheese, Kraft Heinz's first dairy-free mac and cheese in the United States, became available in stores in 2024.

Kraft Mac and Cheese nutritional information

Here are nutrition details on a prepared serving of Kraft Original Mac & Cheese Dinner, according to Kraft Heinz:

Calories: 360Total fat: 12 g (16% of daily value)Cholesterol: 10 mg (4%)Sodium: 710 mg (31%)Total carbohydrates: 49 g (18%)Protein: 10 g

Contributing: Wyatte Grantham-Phillips and Gabe Hauari

Follow Mike Snider on X and Threads: @mikesnider & mikegsnider.

What's everyone talking about? Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day

Featured Weekly Ad