Here Is The Famous Cronut In All Its Glory

Here Is The Famous Cronut In All Its Glory

In case you’re behind on the hype, a Cronut is a croissant-doughnut hybrid created by Dominique Ansel of Dominique Ansel Bakery in New York. It looks and is fried like a doughnut, but it has the delicate layers of a croissant. Since the Cronut’s debut in May, people have been lining up before dawn for a chance to try one of these beauties. Because I mean, just look at the thing. 

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15 Pasta Salads to Make This 4th of July — Recipes from The Kitchn

Let’s talk pasta salads. There are delightfully creamy versions with mayo and there are garlicky ones with pesto. There are pasta salads made with couscous (tiny pasta!) and ones with tortellini. But pretty much any way you bring a pasta salad together, it’s guaranteed to be great. Picnic-ready and coming soon to a cookout near you, here are our top 15 pasta salads for 4th of July party.

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South Carolina Tomatoes: My Summer Salad Hero

Nothing offends me like an unripe tomato. And I’m not referring to a green tomato, which can be transformed into a delicious, fried delight. The tomatoes that get me all worked up are pink, hard and usually served alongside an otherwise decent salad or burger. These pink travesties are particularly offensive in South Carolina in the summer. We grow tomatoes here like nobody’s business, and there’s no excuse for a bad one.

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peach and pecan sandy crumble

peaches, pecan sandies, crumbled

If you think about it, isn’t it strange that we’ve nominated pie as our iconic summer dessert? Do understand, I say this as someone who frequently daydreams about going around the country and teaching people to make pie with a bare minimum of fuss, because I think the only thing standing between you and someone who effortlessly throws pies together because you heard someone was coming over is someone talking you through it once or twice… But I will also fully admit: pie is a pest. It requires very cold fat to be carefully worked into a floury mix until the pieces are exactly the right size. Too small, your crust is flat and crunchy. Too big, butter pools out and burns, leaving sad, tough flakes for crust. Too warm, the bits go small and absorb into the flour. Too cold, good luck rolling it out! And before you even know if the trouble will be worth it, you’ve got to roll out your crust with no holes or tears or your fruit filling will leak through and permanently glue pie-to-pan. And the fruit! Too thick, your pie cuts freakishly like Jell-O; too thin, it spills out everywhere, leaving a hollow crust in its wake. And don’t even get me started on lattice-tops. They’re for really sick people.

deeply toasted pecans
grinding the toasted pecans and flour

Given all of these high stakes, it’s a wonder we don’t all spend our summers, exclusively extolling the virtues of fruit crisps and crumbles, because they’re pie’s laid-back, easy-breezy sibling, the one whose arrival always brings applause. They give you nothing to carefully roll out; you just messily sprinkle the so-called “crust” over the top of the fruit, which can be thickened or not at all because if you’re not slicing it, who cares if it slumps? (And if the thought of fruit that sighs and puddles out onto a plate isn’t more appealing to you than fruit that stands up straight when you slice it, well, I beg to differ.) And the fat! Instead of asking butter to do the thing it would very least like to do on a hot day — that is, to try to stay cold — you begin by melting it.

melted butter into dry mixture

… Read the rest of peach and pecan sandy crumble on smittenkitchen.com


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Easy Potluck Recipe: Esquites (Mexican Corn Salad) — Recipes from The Kitchn

Potluck Recipe: Esquites (Mexican Street Corn Salad)

Summertime is all about picnics and potlucks, so if you’re still in search of the ultimate dish that guarantees return invites and recipe requests, this Mexican street corn salad is for you. Not only will the fresh flavors please any palate, but it’s just as easy to make a double (or triple) batch and it’s equally delicious served hot, cold, or at room temp. Sounds like a winner to me!

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