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Warm Seven-Layer Skillet Dip

4.8

(4)

Warm SevenLayer Skillet Dip on a trivet served with chips
Photograph by Isa Zapata, Prop Styling by Tim Ferro, Food Styling by Mieko Takahashi

This Super Bowl season, you can have cold—and likely congealed—seven-layer dip from the supermarket, or…you can make this warm, melty version begging to be scooped up and eaten. This take combines two homemade game-day icons—rich, creamy refried beans and unctuous cheese sauce—and tops them off with a handful of simple garnishes. (If your favorite store-bought salsa is chunky but watery, drain it over a fine-mesh strainer first to save the dip from turning soupy.) The queso stays fluid at room temperature for a good while, so you can spend your time screaming at the television rather than racing to eat before it solidifies. Let’s take a sec to talk about why.

Yes, this recipe calls for American cheese, and if you’re already plotting a way to replace it, don’t. American cheeses contain sodium citrate or sodium phosphate, salts that keep the cheese’s fat and water together in a perfect emulsion, even as it melts. Try this with another cheese like Parmesan or even extra-sharp cheddar and the fat simply squeezes its way out, resulting in a broken, grainy mess. Buy a block of American cheese at the deli counter and shred it yourself for the smoothest sauce. Avoid blocks or shreds of Velveeta—they contain too much water and not enough fat.

What you’ll need

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