Eating your veggies has never tasted as good as when they’re beer-battered and fried until crispy. Sub the zucchini for any veg—from broccolini to mixed mushrooms.
Skip the boil on pantry-friendly, pre-packaged gnocchi. Roast them and you’ll be richly rewarded with a chewy-on-the-inside, crisp-on-the-outside texture.
Cocchi Americano is a refreshing aperitif from Italy and has just recently become popular in the States. It's the perfect ingredient for delightful summer cocktails.
During summer months, find zucchini blossoms at specialty grocers or at farmers’ markets. Halved scallions can be used instead, and small shrimp can stand in for the squid.
If you’ve ever been intimidated by the thought of making fresh pasta at home, look no further. Ricotta gnocchi is simple to make, and it’s faster and more foolproof than its potato counterparts. The only tricky part is adding enough flour so that your dough is easy to work with, but not so much that it becomes stodgy or tough. If you don't want to make the buttery herb and pea sauce, use whatever you'd prefer, be it marinara, pesto, or sage and brown butter.
This foolproof recipe for ricotta gnocchi turns out pillowy dumplings with a delicate chew. The lemon-cream butter sauce is just right for any occasion.
Alyssa Dattoli, manager of the Fresh Pasta counter at Eataly, puts performance at premium with her FIAT 500X Crossover by striving daily to use pasta making’s long-established traditions so she can create inspired, modern masterpieces.
Sam Sifton of the New York Times and Michael Bauer of the San Francisco Chronicle aren't the only restaurant critics food lovers should be reading on a weekly basis. Each Wednesday, we'll post links to noteworthy reviews from critics across the country. This week, Colicchio & Sons in N.Y.C., Dutch Monkey Doughnuts in Atlanta, and more.
If you don’t have a large enough pot to toss all the shellfish and pasta together, you can always transfer everything to the largest bowl or platter you have, or go old-school and just pour the sauce over the pasta at the table.
Get the recipe: https://weightloss-tricks.today/recipe/seafood-spaghetti-with-mussels-and-shrimp
Make the whole menu: https://weightloss-tricks.today/gallery/feast-of-the-seven-fishes-menu%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv class="StackedRatingsCardWrapper-ghvskg ffDePc SummaryCollectionGridSummaryItem-HgAzv kSXTun search_result_item-6808b3d9a6ccce17146af3e4">
“Osip is a small farm-to-table restaurant in the English countryside. We have a Michelin Star and people travel countries to come eat dinner here.” Today, Bon Appétit spends a day on the line with Chef Ciaran Brennan, head chef at Osip in Somerset. Operating out of a 300-year-old house in the English countryside, Osip grows most of its own produce, letting nature decide what’s on the menu.
Osip is a 2025 Conde Nast Traveler Hot List Restaurant Winner.
Produced by Bon Appétit with FarmToFork™ | Replicate the flavors of Sicily with this one-pot recipe featuring FarmToFork™ Caramelized Onion and Roasted Garlic Sauce
We challenged resident Bon Appétit supertaster Chris Morocco to recreate J. Kenji Lopez-Alt's okonomiyaki in the BA Test Kitchen. The catch? He'll have to identify what he's making with a blindfold over his eyes, letting each of his other senses guide the way.
Check out J. Kenji Lopez-Alt's Okonomiyaki Pancake Recipe here.
Upgrade your cooking skills with his two captivating books by J. Kenji Lopez-Alt, The Food Lab and The WOK, available now!
Bon Appétit joins Taylor Falco, Chef de Cuisine at NYC’s Rolo’s, to make their wood-fired lasagna. Featured on the Bib Gourmand list from the Michelin Guide, Rolo’s puts their unique spin on traditional New York cuisine—including this Bologna-inspired lasagna. After all, there’s a reason Rolo’s is touted as one of Jeremy Allen White’s favorite spots in New York City.
Brad Leone joins Chrissy Tracey at her cabin to make vegan cacio e pepe with grilled mushrooms. This recipes use cashews for the base of the sauce. Blending them with miso helps to mimic the creaminess and cheesiness of the original. And if you can't forage your own maitake and lion's mane mushrooms, store-bought is just fine.
Note: While some types of pasta are made with eggs, traditional cacio e pepe is often made with just an emulsion of cheese, pepper, and pasta water.