Posts in ENTERTAINING
MAKE-AHEAD LASAGNA FOR A CROWD

2020 was supposed to be the year of the Lasagna. Currently, it’s looking more like the year of the bean (or rice, or insert-any-other-pantry ingredient needed to get through a three week quarantine at home). Beans are great, but how many of you can get your kids to eat beans two nights in a row? Not me.

With very few exceptions, we’re all home with our kids for, like, weeeeeeeks—and it seems to me like they are ALWAYS hungry. Lasagna is the kind of food that can keep a family fed for many nights in a row, happily. But it has other perks, too: namely, that you can prepare the whole thing a day before, and store it in the fridge overnight to have ready to pop in the oven an hour before dinner (just before the kids start to whine)…

Read More
GLUTEN-FREE CHOCOLATE CHIP BANANA BREAD

Did anyone else grab bananas by the armful on their last half-calm, half-frantic cruise through the grocery, that last time you went solo, the kids still in school. Maybe you kept your gloves on the whole time—the Coronavirus was already getting real, but not quite in your own backyard yet. Maybe you still bought strawberries and kale, but just in case everyone was right, you still stocked up on rice and beans and pasta and all the 28-oz cans of San Marzano tomatoes your shelves could fit. And bananas, obscene amounts of bananas.

Read More
FRIED RISOTTO (ARACINI) AND RADISH SALAD

Lately I’ve been craving all things crispy, buttery and crunchy on top of fresh and snappy salads (there’s only so far a salad can go on its own on these cold, winter days!). Croutons are nice, but when I want a real treat---I make risotto, roll it into balls and stuff them with a little square of our favorite Alpine cheese. Then we toss them in Panko and frying them in olive oil—voila, Arancini. (Thank you, Italy!)

Read More
A TIRAMISU FOR THE AGES

Tiramisu is my dad and my husband’s favorite dessert--two of the people I love feeding most. But  I didn’t make it for years, somehow recalling it from culinary school as a laborious task. How wrong I was. One night, I decided not to bring home the tempting piece hanging around in the Italian bakery window I passed on my way home from work, and instead make it myself. It was a slam dunk.

News  flash: tiramisu is not only easy (provided you’re not making ladyfingers yourself), it is a built-in make-ahead. You can make this a day ahead, or even two, and still come out looking like an absolute star the day you serve it. Try it for yourself. 

Read More
SNOW DAY RISOTTO WITH PAN-ROASTED MUSHROOMS

There’s a snow-storm here today, and my Alpine dreams are being made with a big bowl of steamy, cheesy risotto. We didn’t grow up eating much rice (aside from my mom’s amazing cashew chicken dinner—never enough cashews or snow peas, but i digress…), but as an adult, my forever comfort food is a creamy bowl of Cacio e Pepe style risotto. This is especially true in Winter, but solidified by our summer trip—my opinion is that it’s always a good day for risotto.

Cheesy risotto is a blank slate for any vegetable toppings you love (like shaved Brussel sprouts or crispy, wild mushrooms, as pictured here)—but can equally employ a festive topping of bright raw vegetables (think pea shoots and shaved radish, as seen below).

Read More
CHOCOLATE ALMOND WHISKEY CAKE || A CHRISTMAS BUNDT

I’m a bundt girl. Like, if my twenties were three-layer sponge cakes with silky butter creams and fresh cascading flowers, the following decade has been more bundt—still beautiful, but wildly unfussy—the kind of cake that turns heads with its smarts, as well as its style.

There have been plenty of layer cake holidays in my years— and years for epic bouche de noels with lovingly crafted meringue mushrooms— but this year I’m craving something a bit fairy tale, like Christmas in Brugge or a small German village. A cake that’s more Hansel and Gretel than Marie Antoinette.

Enter this all-butter-bundt, flecked with chocolate and spiked with whiskey. It’s tender and moist, but with enough structure that it can be wrapped and gifted to neighbors and friends in the days ahead. A brown-paper-package tied up with string, with the heady aroma of chocolate—that, to me, is Christmas.

Read More
HOLIDAY STYLE: THE PIANO

I have a thing for pianos. Ours isn’t a fancy one, but it’s meaningful—and I love nothing more than having it played. We had this little upright beauty even in our tiny 420 square foot city apartment, despite the precious space it took up, because making music—or having the ability to make music in the home—is joy.

A close second to having our piano played (ideally, but someone way more skilled than me—including Andras or Greta), is styling it for parties or the holidays. For years I didn’t have a bar cart, or a sideboard, so the piano had to do—it became a staging ground for cheese boards and delicious nibbles and tucked away treats.

It’s not hard to do this at home if you, too, have a piano. Here’s a little inspiration ( if you need more—I have a whole PINTEREST board dedicated to PIANO MOMENTS, here) plus a few tips and tricks for playing up this special part of your home this holiday.

Read More
HOLIDAY MEAL: CRISPY, CHEESY POTATO PANCAKE

The first Christmas tree Andras and I bought together was an 8-foot blue spruce for our 8-square-foot studio apartment in New York City, just two months after we married. I remember how the way I looked at him, carrying that tree like it was no big deal, ignoring the prickers or the weight of it, crossing our busy streets to our quiet cul de sac on the East River. That night I lit candles. I made a perfect omelet, salad and a chocolate pie. He put on music. We both smiled, a lot.

That was 11 years ago this year. Honestly, it’s been a looooong, time since we put that kind of effort into a meal just for us.

Read More
CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES \\ HOLIDAY STYLE

How many of you cookie swap? Well, I’d be lying if I said I’d been to a cookie swap in the last five years, but it was one my favorite thing about holidays growing up. My mom was a cookie swap queen. And by that I mean, mostly, she baked her standard pale and crispy and perfectly uniform sugar cookies in the shape of bells and holly and trees and mittens, and let us sprinkle on the sugar, dutifully took them to the church cookie swap the first Sunday in December, and came home with a box overflowing with two dozen snowballs (Mexican Wedding Cookies), Peanut Butter Blossoms, homemade toffee, and in later years, those little round pretzels with melted chocolate and M and M’s meant to look like red-nosed reindeer. You can pop back several of those in just one bite.

Read More
A FRIENDLIER FRIENDSGIVING: CHEESE BOARDS + OYSTERS (2)

It’s a week until the big day, and I’ve been touting ease around here all week. And I mean it—this menu (and this dessert) are epically easy in the grand scheme of all things holiday. But you didn’t think I would leave it at that, did you? Even simple menu planning requires some knowledge, and how to. I’m here for you.

To pull off the Friendliest, Cheese + Oysters Thanksgiving, Ever (as I’m calling it) you will need a small handful of foods that can be curated from a single grocer, or a few local markets. Keep your shop quick and easy, leaving you time to play stylist (if you like that kind of thing) arranging your meal across a single sideboard, atop your piano, on your kitchen island or even a dresser that’s been cleared for the cause.

For the food….

Read More
A FRIENDLIER FRIENDSGIVING: CHEESE BOARDS + OYSTERS (1)

I remember everything about the first year I didn’t go home to be with my parents on Thanksgiving. It was the fall after I met my (now)  husband. I’d already lived in New York for a long time, but it was the first year I felt like there was something in the city worth sticking out a major holiday for. I cried a little at the thought of missing that special family time, the epic meal, the allocating of chores--I would brine the turkey (as I was the only one who knew how, or why it mattered), my sisters would tackle creamed corn, dad was on mashed potatoes, my brother flexed his cranberry relish card while my mom made pies--all the perfect pies. But I also wondered what new and perhaps (one day) meaningful new traditions might join them.

That morning, Andras made me the most horrible buckwheat pancakes known to man. I cried miserably. It was a disaster. But, in true Andras fashion (after all, I later married him), he made up for it--taking me on a slow, cozy bike ride to Chinatown for the most soul-warming steamed pork buns which we ate, street side, from crinkly brown paper bags. It wasn’t a perfect new tradition, but it was a stepping stone…

Read More
YES, BLONDIE

The other day, I fielded a VERY IMPORTANT question via Instagram about my Chocolate Chip Cookies for Modern Times: DO THEY BLONDIE?

Why, yes! I hadn’t thought of it because, frankly, blondies are often too dry or too sweet or just a bit too meh for my taste. But, the potential of blondies is obvious: uniformly moist, chewy cookies with relatively little crust (unless you choose an edge piece). And in the vein of easy and modern (as my cookies promise to be)—blondies are the even faster, even easier answer.

Read More
EASY MISO RAMEN (WITH TOFU, AVOCADO AND CHILE OIL)

BACK-TO-SCHOOL. I cringe at those words when I hear them in ads and get-organized campaigns. Yes, routine is good for us, but I miss the Indian summers of my youth, when creating structure (like homework nooks and regular meal times) wasn’t my responsibility. It's taken us a full four weeks to get back into the groove, but I’ll admit, having two kids in schools that have an actual start time—with a school bell—has created an order we haven’t known in eight years.

There’s been another game changer, too: Greta is super excited to help with way more meal prep, packing lunches and even tackling a few dinners on her own. The first thing I taught her to make is homemade Miso Ramen, with white miso paste, quick-cook ramen noodles, tofu, avocado and fresh greens or veggies she can pick from our garden. It's a super win for me (a healthy dinner I don't have to cook) and a pride point for my girl, who feels great about making a hot meal even her dad will devour.

Read More
SLOW COOKER CHEESE RISOTTO WITH SQUASH & KALE

Did you know you can make risotto in the slow cooker?? (I KNOW!!!). My kids and husband love risotto, but I can’t always pull it off on a weeknight. Even though Italians consider risotto the ultimate fast food, the American brain auto-files it as fancy or complicated. It’s not, but it does require some standing and stirring, and on school nights (and work days), every minute counts.

So, gear up your slow cookers, your old grannie hand-me-down or a new fancy number like this one from Crate and Barrel that just come on the scene over here in my kitchen, and is already loved. Then, just follow along the recipe below. Mix in whatever veggies and greens float your boat, and serve with some serious pride—this beauty only took you about 15 minutes to prep, but they’ll never know.

Read More
HONEY AND FENNEL GOAT CHEESE TOAST WITH ROASTED GRAPES

Fall brings with it all the cravings, for cozy sweaters, roasted aromas, plums and grapes and pears and with them, the kind of creamy toasted…..

Something easy, but earthy. Something spectacularly seeming with a secretly low workload behind it. Goat cheese toast delivers on this. Starting with honey chevre, which has a subtle sweetness that makes it palatable to even my four-year-old, you can top it with

To amp up the wow factor, I’ve seasoned my honey chevre with fennel seed, black pepper and maldon, and served it potted like a pate might be on a cheeseboard. Then, I popped a few clusters of grapes into the oven at high heat with salt and pepper and oil and yes, more fennel. It’s surprising how this anise-forward seed brings out the best of fall, and doesn’t overpower the sweet grape but instead, tempers them just a bit, keeping them feeling savory.

Clip with small scissors or pull off individual grapes to top your toasts.

Read More
RASPBERRY RIPPLE ICE CREAM CAKE

For Labor Day weekend, you don’t need something fancy, and certainly nothing laborious, that pulls you away from soaking in the last bits of summer, that eeks into your good long chill in a hammock or the chance to catch the way the sun hits your daughter’s pink, freckled nose. No, this weekend you need something easy and—without a doubt—you need something make ahead. Because after all, even summering hard until the back to school bell rings on

READ ON FOR THE RECIPE

Read More
EASY ENTERTAINING | LE CRÈMEUX CHEESE

When I entertain, I like there to be a main event--a centerpiece that speaks of abundance, but also ease: a signal to both me and my guests that there will be plenty here, but we can relax and settle into it without a lot of shuffling about. This main event should be made or purchased ahead, and can look like a giant pork shoulder braised to a juicy, succulent tenderness, or a bountiful wheel of cheese, a no-hold’s bar approach to the cheese platter that we’ve all grown to know and love. There’s no worry of leaving enough for the person to your right or your left, just a welcome mat to heartily enjoy. 

Read More
CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES FOR MODERN TIMES

You’re going out on the limb when you set out to makeover the world’s most iconic cookie, especially one you’ve already somewhat famously madeover before. But, I’ve decided not to take cookie baking so seriously in my next decade of life, and that’s just how these Chocolate Chip Cookies for Modern Times came to be in my new book, Every Day is Saturday. I wanted o have a little fun and make something beautiful, super satisfying, overtly chocolatey while still a smidge toward healthyish on the cookie barometer…

READ ON FOR THE RECIPE.

Read More
FEED SUPPER | DOMINO COLOR ISSUE

For four years running, I’ve been hosting a FEED Supper for my community, in Upstate New York. It started simply, as a good excuse to gather friends for FEED foundation’s efforts to end childhood hunger, a cause that’s always been near and dear to my heart—but the FEED Supper campaign has grown to mean so much more to me, and this whole community I now call home. This year, our FEED Supper was photographed and included in this months issue of DOMINO MAGAZINE, my all time favorite! Read on for more details….

Read More