What’s Cooking This Weekend? — Weekend of October 11-12, 2014

Hello cooking friends! It has been wonderful to meet many of you this week during our tour for The Kitchn Cookbook. Thanks so much to all of you who came out in New York City, Chicago, and Houston! We totally appreciate it, and we hope to see more of you tomorrow in Dallas (Los Angeles, Columbus, and Philadelphia coming up next week). We’d love to hear what you’re cooking this weekend, so tell us all about it — whether it’s here in the comments or in person at one of our parties!

Plus some favorite posts from the past week:

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The Best Cuts of Beef for Pot Roast — Meat Basics

Even growing up in a Chinese-American family that predominantly ate Chinese food, I knew what pot roast was. I’d seen it mentioned on television and read enough about this classic American dish to know that it was homey and delicious.

Now that I have my own young family to feed, I truly understand why pot roast is so popular — it’s inexpensive, makes a ton of servings, and makes the whole house smell delicious and warm. Although it’s pretty hard to screw up pot roast, there is one big factor that will make or break the dish: choosing the right cut of beef.

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We Tracked Down and Tested the 10 Best Pumpkin Goods at Trader Joe’s — Grocery Shopping

Pumpkin Spiced Pumpkin Seeds
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This last week has been unseasonably warm in California, but you’d never know it at my neighborhood Trader Joe’s! The place is cozied up for fall with harvest-themed displays, cold weather produce, and orange packaging galore. Heat wave aside, we are officially in the midst of Pumpkin Spice Season.

Here are ten of the best buys from the over three dozen pumpkin and pumpkin-spiced products on offer at TJ’s right now.

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5 Ways To Bring Color To Your Kitchen Without Painting

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One of the easiest and least expensive ways to bring bold color to any space is to slap a coat of paint on those bland and boring white walls. But if you’re having a hard time committing to a color or are just renting your current digs then it’s not always the best option.

Here are five ways to make a colorful splash without busting open a paint can.

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Recipe: Spaghetti with Corn & Parsley Pesto — Weeknight Dinner Recipes from The Kitchn

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For me, transitioning into cooler weather means spending more time in the kitchen again after a long hot summer spent avoiding the oven. Once there’s a slight chill in the air, I get excited about devoting more time to meal-making.

A warm bowl of pasta is always an easy, cold-weather comfort food and this hearty whole wheat spaghetti is exactly what I want right now. It’s coated in an herby pesto and speckled with the last of summer’s sweet corn — exactly the right dish to carry me into fall.

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Cooking School Day 5: Chicken & Poultry — The Kitchn’s Cooking School

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  • Today’s Lesson: Chicken & Poultry
  • The Goal: 20 lessons, 20 days to become a better cook at home
  • Enter to win The Kitchn Cookbook: Simply share and tag photos of your Kitchn Cooking School progress on Instagram and Twitter with #kitchnschool to enter for a chance to win. We’re giving away one copy for every homework assignment during The Kitchn’s Cooking School. See rules and regulations
  • Enroll & see all the lessons so far: The Kitchn’s Cooking School

Today we’re doing a deep-dive into poultry, primarily chicken. This lean, inexpensive meat is the most popular animal protein in America, beating out beef for the first time in 2012. Preparing chicken, whether it’s a whole bird or just a breast or two, is an important skill for any cook to know by heart. (By the way, we should stop here and acknowledge all the vegetarian and vegan cooks in our ranks. We will spend a couple days on meat, but after that it’s on to tofu, tempeh, and more veg-friendly cooking!)

Let’s get started: Have you ever cut up a chicken? Do you know where to start?

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better chocolate babka

new chocolate babkas + impatient kindergartener feet

Inadvertently, this has become Festivus week on Smitten Kitchen, wherein I air my grievances at past recipes and exhibit what I hope can be passed off as “feats of strength” in reformulating them for modern times. Still, nobody could more surprised than I am that of all the recipes in the archives, it’s Martha Stewart’s decadent chocolate babkas from seven years ago that have ended up in this queue, because at the time we found them beyond reproach: rich, buttery, crumbly and intensely chocolaty. They were precisely what we’d remembered getting from the store growing up, but better, I mean, I’d hope they’d be. Clocking in at 3/4 pound of semisweet chocolate and almost a cup of butter per loaf, the recipe in fact uses triple this (2.25 pounds of chocolate! 1.25 pounds of butter!) for three loaves. And not unlike the chicken pot pies, this, along with the messy, complicated prep, became the problem. Despite repeated requests from our families every holiday, I’ve probably only made it once since, if that. It’s all too much.

the dough, after overnighting in the fridge
rolling out chilled dough is easier

This high holiday season, however, I decided to audition a different chocolate babka — the stunning, twisty, glossy chocolate krantz cakes that I imagine have tempted anyone that’s opened Ottolenghi’s Jerusalem cookbook. Although I was curious, I knew there was no way they could be as good. How could they be, what with only 2 1/4 ounces of dark chocolate and just over 1/2 cup of butter per loaf? It was going to taste abstemious, and wrong. Abstemious chocolate babka is wrong, wrong on a moral-ethical level, as far as I’m concerned.

melted chocolate to make paste

… Read the rest of better chocolate babka on smittenkitchen.com


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Recipe: Baked Potato Casserole — Side Dish Recipes from The Kitchn

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Mashed potatoes are a family favorite, but this decadent casserole takes the classic to a whole new level. The flavors of a fully loaded baked potato are baked until gooey and bubbling, making this dish impossible to resist. It’s holiday-worthy for sure, but don’t wait for a special occasion. Add this comfort food to your list of fall favorites — and oh yeah, don’t forget to share!

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