4.52 / 5 Stars | 901 Reviews
by ms_sally
“Quick and easy way to cook turkey in the slow cooker. With only two ingredients, the only hard part is waiting.”
4.52 / 5 Stars | 901 Reviews
by ms_sally
“Quick and easy way to cook turkey in the slow cooker. With only two ingredients, the only hard part is waiting.”
Recipe: Southeast Asian Canned Salmon & Rice Cakes with Sriracha Mayo
How’s your weekend looking? Are you in the path of unexpected snowstorms? (We are.) Look at the bright side and take one more opportunity to make some hearty winter fare. Or defy the lingering winter weather and make something fresh and bright, like these salmon cakes. What’s your cooking plan this weekend? Doing winter cooking? Spring cooking? A little of both? Tell us what’s in your kitchen this weekend!
Dinner parties are one of life’s great pleasures: the preparation and planning, the first pop of a cork, the mutual enjoyment of new dishes and old favorites, and the conversation around the table that can last into the wee hours. But what if every night is a dinner party and you have to keep it simple? More often than not, we have extra people around our table, usually aunts, uncles, or grandparents, but we’re happy to welcome friends, as long as they don’t mind eating with children. The meals are simple, served family style, often including recipes from my childhood, and the conversation stays clean. (Little pitchers have big ears and all that.)
With spring seemingly just around the corner (maybe? please?), I can’t think of anything better than a warm bowl of this spaghetti squash with tender asparagus and creamy herbed ricotta. Then again, those scallops with orzo and that citrusy millet salad are looking mighty fine, especially if you add a square of fresh rosemary focaccia to the bargain. But if you’re still in a wintry mood, that braised beef over polenta or the hearty Spanish bean soup will keep you cozy, for sure.
When I saw this kitchen over at Apartment Therapy today, I immediately thought of this other kitchen. It looks like the owners, to make the most of their small, sectioned-off kitchen and its serving window, outlined the outside main wall in a bright fire engine red. It really makes that corner stand out, doesn’t it? See photos of the other side below:
• Mini Versions of Big Things
Apartment Therapy
I tend to be a fairly nervous, overly-anxious hostess of dinner parties, and I am always envious of my friends who can casually finish a roast while simultaneously carrying on a conversation and pouring wine. Whether you identify with me or with my put-together friends, Seriously Simple Parties is a book that we can all appreciate. It’s full of solid party-throwing advice and the kinds of recipes that will have you looking for an excuse to invite people over.
When it comes to large family gatherings, no matter how much I humble-brag about my brisket, roasted vegetable sides or the way I know my way around a salad, I am always instead nominated to bring desserts. So, like a certain Phoebe on cup-and-ice duty that I will date myself by referencing, I take things very seriously, in part because I have a lot of rules for Passover desserts. The first is that that whatever dessert I make cannot include even a speck of matzo meal. I’m sorry, I realize this is a sensitive topic and I should tread more carefully, but I find the taste of matzo meal just awful in anything but matzo ball soup. My difficult palate aside, I also figure if I’m going to go through the effort to come up with something new (and hopefully better) in the flourless department, it would be of more use to more people were it also gluten-free, so that’s the second rule. The final rule is that I want the dessert to be good enough that I’d choose it any other day of year. It can’t just be good for a Passover dessert. It can’t just be good for something gluten-free. It has to be objectively good. Really, shouldn’t everything be?
My inspiration this year was a cake I found on Epicurious. Isn’t it a beaut? I knew I had to find a way to make it happen, but I also knew it wasn’t going to be the way it was written. Aside from the fact that it is not actually a Schwarzwälder Torte (a chocolate cake with whipped cream, cherries and often Kirsh, what we sometimes refer to as a Black Forest Cake) and that it contains both flour and powdered sugar (a Passover no-no, unless you find or make cornstarch-free stuff), reviewers seemed very unhappy with the meringues, which were too thin and from what I could tell, not particularly flavorful. I turned instead to the macaroon component of an almond torte I made a few years ago; the torte was a headache but the macaroons ended up having a lovely flavor largely because they contained such a high proportion of nuts. Given the choice, I always prefer meringues that are closer to macaroons.
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4.78 / 5 Stars | 9 Reviews
by Glory
“Simple Syrup is brushed on cakes for added moisture and flavor. This one can be flavored with brandy or rum.”