Kick things off with Dorie Greenspan's age-old recipe for chicken in a pot.
| Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Sophia Pappas. |
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What to Cook This Weekend |
Good morning. Did you miss me? I spent more than two weeks not writing newsletters, not editing recipes or thinking about stories to tell, not checking in with correspondents, not clearing my inbox, not doing much of anything productive besides cooking for my family, chasing fish in the surf, chopping aged maple and reading books in the shade. It was a glorious break from a routine I generally treasure, and to which I return refreshed and excited, eager for what's next. |
And it's the weekend already! I might kick it off with Dorie Greenspan's latest, an age-old recipe for chicken in a pot (above). She's been perfecting it since she decamped for Paris at the age of 19 and got herself invited for dinner by a stranger, who served a similar dish that, she wrote for The Times this week, she's carried around in her head for decades, "calling it up as a kind of culinary yardstick each time I roast a chicken." |
That, alongside a salad dressed with a vinaigrette warmed with pan juices from the bird, and a torn baguette? Late-summer perfection, I think, especially in advance of a Labor Day weekend that calls for lots of tomatoes, even more corn, plenty of grilled hamburgers and sausages, potato salads and glasses of planter's punch. |
But not only that. I want to try Eric Kim's new recipe for zucchini panzanella, a riot of flavors, and Alexa Weibel's new recipe for a jalapeΓ±o-ranch chopped salad, too. I want a spread of cold vegetables to serve with green dip, maybe some cod cakes made with whatever fish I can find at the market. And while I'm at it, I'd like some grilled oysters with hot-sauce butter, if only because they taste to me of the season: summer giving way to the chill of autumn. (This is especially true if you shuck the oysters instead of grilling them, and daub them with the hot-sauce butter before serving.) |
We are standing by to help, should something go awry in your cooking or with our technology. Just write: cookingcare@nytimes.com and someone will help get you sorted. You can also write to me: foodeditor@nytimes.com. I read every letter sent. |
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