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Tag: Food Industry

  • Smithfield Foods to buy LI-based Nathan’s Famous for $450M | Long Island Business News

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    Frankie, the mascot for Nathan’s Famous hot dogs, excites the audience at the official weigh-in ceremony, ahead of the Coney Island’s 2025 Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest in New York City on July 3, 2025. / REUTERS file photo by Angelina Katsanis

    U.S. will buy century-old in a $450 million deal that adds the most iconic U.S. hot dog name to its portfolio of brands, the company said Wednesday. 

    Smithfield Foods is the licensee of Nathan’s Famous pre-packaged , selling a wide variety of these beef franks at more than 20,000 supermarkets and wholesale club stores nationwide. 

    Smithfield will pay $102 per share, a nearly 10% premium to Nathan’s close on Tuesday.  Nathan’s shares were up about 9% at $100.94 in premarket trading. 

    Smithfield already holds an exclusive license to manufacture and sell Nathan’s Famous products in the United States and Canada and at Sam’s Club stores in Mexico. 

    Shares of Smithfield, a majority-owned subsidiary of Hong Kong-listed rose about 2%. The stock gained roughly 6% in 2025 after its market debut. 

    Nathan’s Famous, which has its headquarters at One Jericho Plaza in Jericho, began as a hot dog stand in 1916, founded by immigrant Nathan Handwerker with $300 borrowed from entertainers Jimmy Durante and Eddie Cantor, and initially sold hot dogs for 5 cents. The brand later expanded nationwide under the leadership of Handwerker’s son, Murray. 

    The brand is known for its annual hot dog-eating competition held at Nathan’s Coney Island on July 4 every year, where winners are awarded a “mustard belt” for eating the most hot dogs. Last year, Joey Chestnut was declared the men’s champion after he devoured 70.5 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes, according to the company’s website.  

     “The Nathan’s Famous acquisition is a meaningful step in the progression of Smithfield Foods, allowing us to own all of the top brands in our portfolio,” Smithfield CEO Shane Smith said.  

    The deal is expected to close in the first half of this year, Smithfield said. 


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  • Parenting 101: Last-minute holiday shortcuts

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    Whether you’re just getting through Hanukkah or gearing up for Christmas, the holidays can be a stressful time. So here are some last-minute hoiliday shortcuts to save you time, money, and headaches!

    – Make use of leftovers. Or freeze em. Stash some leftover turkey and gravy into Ziploc bags and freeze them, or turn them into a great soup, pot pie, or club sandwich. There’s no reason to go through the trouble of preparing big meals unless you can make use of the leftovers (and save time cooking more lunches and dinners). Throw the carcass into a crockpot with leftover carrots and celery, some water, and let it do it’s thing all day for a terrific and flavourful (and easy) stock. If you really don’t know what to do with all those leftovers, make up some care packages for neighbours. Or donate it to a local soup kitchen.

    – Have extra Tupperware, baggies, and bins on-hand. Kids will be tearing through toys and playsets that have lots of little pieces, so it’s best to have a few organizational tools to keep things in order. That way, pieces won’t get lost. It will also make putting the new toys away later a little easier.

    – Have a potluck. Instead of hosting and being in charge of an entire meal, ask everyone to bring one dish so the food prep is more evenly distributed. Switch things up and do fondue or make-your-own pizzas.

    – Buy ready-made cookie, pastry and bread dough. Why make it from scratch when you already have so much to do?!

    – When baking, make extra and freeze it for last-minute gifts in a pinch. Package cookies in a brown paper bag decorated with your child’s artwork for a distinctly rustic look, or stack in a repurposed Pringles’ can for a creative touch.

    – Enlist help from the kids. Kids can do a lot around the holidays to lighten your load. Have them make homemade cards for neighbours and teachers, decorate cakes or cookies, or help with decorating by giving them simple projects like making paper chains. 

    – Take a little time for you. Stop for five minutes. Sip a cup of tea while watching the snowfall. I know you have lots to do, but you need to pause and rest, even for a few minutes.

    Happy Holidays!

    Melany xx

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  • RANCHERS NUMBERS DECLINING: Bailout for farmers doesn’t include ranchers yet

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    TAHLEQUAH – The president announced on Dec. 8, that the U.S. Department of Agriculture will make $12 billion available to farmers in a one-time bridge payment to farmers, to be released by Feb. 28, 2026.

    President Donald J. Trump, along with U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins, announced the payments in response to temporary trade market disruptions and increased production costs.

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    By Lee Guthrie | lguthrie@tahlequahdailypress.com

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  • RANCHERS NUMBERS DECLINING: Bailout for farmers doesn’t include ranchers yet

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    TAHLEQUAH – The president announced on Dec. 8, that the U.S. Department of Agriculture will make $12 billion available to farmers in a one-time bridge payment to farmers, to be released by Feb. 28, 2026.

    President Donald J. Trump, along with U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins, announced the payments in response to temporary trade market disruptions and increased production costs.

    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

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    kAm#682C5:?8 =236=:?8 2D &]$] 3667[ 96 D2:5 E96 5:776C6?E G6?F6D =:<6 8C@46CJ DE@C6D[ C6DE2FC2?ED[ 7C@K6? >62=D 2?5 E96 >62E 42D6[ >2<6 :E 5:77:4F=E E@ =236=]k^Am

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    By Lee Guthrie | lguthrie@tahlequahdailypress.com

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  • RANCHERS NUMBERS DECLINING: Bailout for farmers doesn’t include ranchers yet

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    TAHLEQUAH – The president announced on Dec. 8, that the U.S. Department of Agriculture will make $12 billion available to farmers in a one-time bridge payment to farmers, to be released by Feb. 28, 2026.

    President Donald J. Trump, along with U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins, announced the payments in response to temporary trade market disruptions and increased production costs.

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    By Lee Guthrie | lguthrie@tahlequahdailypress.com

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  • Another Burger King bites the dust in Lincoln. Here’s what is replacing it.

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    Another Burger King bites the dust in Lincoln. Here's what is replacing it.

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  • No retirement plans for ‘Terry,’ a 90-year-old waitress

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    HAVERHILL — Ninety years young and still calling the shots, shuffling menus, and asking patrons if they need a refill.

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    By Jonah Frangiosa | Staff Writer

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  • Parenting 101: #MyTealPumpkin : Making Halloween safe for Quebec’s 100,000 children with food allergies

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    Halloween can be difficult for children with allergies, who are often left out due to the distribution of risky treats. Once again this year, for the 9th edition of #MyTealPumpkin, parents, neighbors, friends, and businesses are invited to participate in large numbers so that every child can feel fully included in the celebration. Launched in the United States in 2014, the initiative now shines in about fifteen countries.

    On October 31st, painting a pumpkin turquoise or displaying the visual on your door (available here) signals to families that non-food treats are available for children with allergies, ensuring a safe and inclusive Halloween.

    “Food allergies represent a major and growing health issue in Quebec. When we know that up to 8% of young children in Quebec live with food allergies, and that this segment of the population has increased by 18%, I believe the #MyTealPumpkin initiative takes on its full meaning at Halloween. This activity provides us with a wonderful opportunity to raise awareness among young and old alike,” said Dominique Seigneur, Communications Director at Allergy Quebec, in a press release.

    Anaphylaxis is a severe reaction that can be fatal in just minutes. It is estimated that up to 75% of people allergic to peanuts will be accidentally exposed during their lifetime. In Canada, ten so-called “priority” allergens have been identified (peanuts, wheat, milk, mustard, tree nuts, eggs, fish and shellfish, sesame, soy, and sulfites) as they cause the majority of severe reactions. In total, more than 160 allergenic foods are listed in the country.

    – JC

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  • Gorton’s opens Indiana plant

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    To meet growing demand for its products, Gloucester-based Gorton’s Seafood has opened a new seafood processing facility in Lebanon, Indiana.

    Gorton’s, a subsidiary of Nissui Group of Japan, invested an estimated $89.3 million to build the plant in the Lebanon Business Park on the city’s southwest side, company officials said previously.


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    By Times Staff

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  • A community program on coastal foraging presented by Gloucester SaLT

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    Residents have an opportunity to learn about coastal foraging in a free community program presented by Capt. Joe Sanfilippo, a 30-year veteran of commercial fishing.

    The program takes place on Thursday, June 12, at 5:30 p.m.; the community course will meet at the waterfront tennis courts on the boulevard with parking on the street or at nearby Boudreau Field.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

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    By Times Staff

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  • Car crashes into Salem bar

    Car crashes into Salem bar

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    SALEM — The first customer early Friday morning at the Sidelines Sports Bar & Grill was not someone looking for coffee.

    It was a white sedan that slammed through the front wall of the Canal Street restaurant, plunging completely inside.

    According to owners, the accident caused extensive damage to the brick building, closing the restaurant for an undetermined period of time. 

    In the meantime, the owners are encouraging customers to patronize its sister location at Paddy Kelly’s Restaurant & Pub on Washington Street.

    As of Friday, there were no reports of injuries.

    Police are still investigating the accident.

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    By Buck Anderson | Staff Writer

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  • Natasha Kravchuk from ‘Natasha’s Kitchen’ shares her recipe for her mom’s fluffy pancakes

    Natasha Kravchuk from ‘Natasha’s Kitchen’ shares her recipe for her mom’s fluffy pancakes

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    Natasha Kravchuk, from the popular blog “Natasha’s Kitchen,” makes her mother’s Ukrainian pancakes every Sunday. And every Sunday they are gobbled up. Like American pancakes, they’re light and fluffy. But yeasted batter gives them more flavor, rise, and substantial texture, and they puff up like doughnuts when they hit the hot oil in the pan. Kravchuk also loves that the batter is make-ahead friendly and tastes even better as it sits and ferments in the fridge. That gives the pancakes, which she calls “Baba’s Fluffy Oladi Pancakes,” a subtle sourdough-like flavor.

    Natasha Kravchuk’s mom (or Baba, as her kids call her) makes these Ukrainian pancakes every Sunday, and every Sunday they are gobbled up. Like American pancakes, they’re light and fluffy, but the yeasted batter gives them even more flavor, rise, and substantial texture, and they puff up like doughnuts when they hit the hot oil in the pan.

    Kravchuk also loves that the batter is make-ahead friendly, and tastes even better as it sits and ferments in the fridge, which gives what she calls “Baba’s Fluffy Oladi Pancakes” a subtle sourdough-like flavor.

    BABA’S FLUFFY OLADI PANCAKES

    Serves: 6-8

    1 cup water, warmed to 115°F

    1 cup buttermilk

    1 large egg, room temperature

    2 tablespoons extra-light olive oil or vegetable oil, plus more for the pan

    2 tablespoons sugar

    1½ teaspoons instant yeast

    1¼ teaspoons fine sea salt

    2¾ cups all-purpose flour

    FOR SERVING:

    Honey or jam of your choice

    Sour cream

    1. In a large bowl, whisk together the water, buttermilk, egg, oil, sugar, yeast and salt. Add the flour, 1 cup at a time, whisking to incorporate each addition before adding more. Continue whisking until the batter is smooth with a thin, cake-batter consistency.

    2. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let the batter rise at room temperature for 1½ to 2 hours, or in a warm place (about 100°F) for 1 hour. The mixture should become very bubbly and almost double in size.

    3. In a large nonstick or cast-iron skillet over medium heat, add enough oil to coat the bottom of the pan. Working in batches, add heaping tablespoons of the batter to the hot skillet, spacing them just far enough apart that they aren’t touching and can still be flipped easily. Cook the pancakes for about 1½ minutes per side, until golden brown, adding more oil as needed after flipping. Feel free to reduce the heat if you find they’re browning too quickly. Continue with the remaining batter, keeping the skillet well-oiled between batches to ensure crisp, tasty, and beautifully golden edges on the pancakes.

    4. Transfer the pancakes to a platter and serve warm with honey, raspberry sauce and sour cream.

    Pro Tips & Tricks

    This recipe yields a big batch, but you could halve the ingredients for a smaller number of servings. These also reheat very well, so you could make the entire batch and reheat them in the toaster.

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    By The Associated Press

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  • The Asian noodles Americans are crushing on right now

    The Asian noodles Americans are crushing on right now

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    Noodles — whether they’re straight or squiggly, thick or thin, served chilled or in a steaming hot broth — Americans are crazy for them. For years, noodles simply meant pasta to most people in the U.S. But lately, our growing love affair with Asian cuisine has delivered a new slate of trendy, crave-able noodle types. Discover which noodles are the most popular and how to incorporate them into your own menus to bring new life to an old standby.

    From the intriguing springiness of ramen noodles to the delicateness of rice vermicelli, the satisfying chew of udon, and the playful appeal of squiggly knife-cut noodles, Asian noodles offer a vast range of distinct textures and flavors. Their stories reveal the secrets of their burgeoning popularity and illustrate the diverse influences shaping America’s food scene.

    Americans’ appetite for noodles is substantial — to the tune of 5.95 billion pounds of them consumed each year, according to Grandview Research. The report predicted a market growth rate of nearly 4% per year through 2030.

    The stunning variety of Asian noodle dishes means that you could easily make a new noodle recipe every meal for a month without repeating yourself.

    Tracing the noodle revolution

    Much of the modern noodle mania can be traced to Momofuku Ando, the man who invented the world’s first instant noodles in 1958. His instant chicken ramen was an immediate hit with customers who were dazzled by the magic of a tasty and nutritious meal that could be prepared in two minutes flat.

    First celebrated as a satisfying and affordable meal, instant ramen was embraced by college students and budget-conscious families alike. Then, in 2004, David Chang opened NYC’s Momofuku Noodle Bar, elevating ramen to previously unimagined gastronomic heights.

    Like most trends, the growing appreciation of ramen and other Asian noodles is being driven in large part by young adults, people in their 20s and 30s who have a bit more spending power than they did in college but are still watching their food budgets. “They wind up eating more upscale versions of the foods they ate in college like pizza and ramen,” Chef Noah Michaels told Symrise at their recent Ramen Invitational. Increasingly fast-paced lives, rising food costs and increased availability of Asian products are also driving the trend.

    Diverse Asian noodles

    Twenty years after David Chang’s Momofuku Noodle Bar helped change ramen’s image from a cheap fast food to a trendy food phenomenon, Americans have their choice of a dizzying array of Asian noodle dishes. Influencers have taken to social media to show off their favorites and inspire home cooks. One trend, dubbed TikTok Ramen, has them upgrading instant noodles by adding their own sauces and toppings. Using pantry staples like soy sauce and garlic, the final dish is a piping hot plate of springy, chewy noodles in a savory sauce, reminiscent of Japanese mazemen or Indonesian mi goreng.

    And it’s not just super-simple TikTok recipes that home cooks are experimenting with. Rice stick noodle recipes, for example, are increasingly popular. Take Vietnamese fresh rolls or summer rolls. To make them, quick-cook rice noodles are bundled, along with herbs, vegetables and protein, in a translucent rice paper wrapper — a great meal choice for anyone on a gluten-free diet.

    Hokkien noodles are another example of a versatile and delicious dish that’s having a social media moment. Similar to Chinese chow mein or Filipino pancit bihon, it’s a stir-fry of thin egg noodles fried with meat or seafood and vegetables in an umami-rich sauce. It can be prepared in under 30 minutes and in just one pan, which makes it a perfect option for home cooks.

    Versatile soba noodles are made from naturally gluten-free buckwheat, a superfood that Whole Foods recently predicted will be one of the top 10 food trends of 2024. Eaten hot or cold, soba noodles are a delicious way to enjoy the many health benefits of buckwheat.

    Spotlight on knife-cut noodles

    If you think making noodles is as simple as mixing flour and water, you technically wouldn’t be wrong. But, as the recent meteoric rise of squiggly noodles illustrates, some noodles are far more than the sum of their ingredients. Knife-cut noodles, or “dao xiao mian,” have surged in popularity since Trader Joe’s began selling a quick-cooking, air-dried version. The style of noodles isn’t new — A-Sha Foods has been selling a version of them in the U.S. since the 1990s — but once they hit TJ’s shelves, the internet was all over them.

    These popular noodles are made using a mechanical process, but they’re meant to be eaten like the traditional Shanxi-style knife-cut noodles that are painstakingly made by hand. Trader Joe’s Squiggly Knife Cut Style Noodles, as well as a Momofuku-branded version made by A-Sha, are quick to cook, and they come with their own convenient and easily upgradeable packet of sauce.

    The future of Asian noodles in America

    The wildly popular knife-cut noodles dominating TikTok aren’t just a blip. A glance at industry trends shows that Americans can’t seem to get enough of Asian noodle dishes. Indeed, the noodle market is projected to continue growing over the next few years, largely thanks to noodles’ status as affordable and convenient staples.

    So, what Asian noodles are you making next? While you’re experimenting, you can noodle over the fact that Momofuku Ando attributed his long life — living to the ripe age of 96 — in large part to a daily diet of the instant ramen he invented.

    Robin Donovan is the author of more than 40 cookbooks, including the bestselling Campfire Cuisine , Ramen Obsession , and Ramen for Beginners . A food writer, recipe developer, and food photographer, she is the creator of the food blogAll Ways Delicious, where she shares easy recipes for the best dishes from around the world.

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    By Robin Donovan | Food Drink Life

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  • Canned chickpeas — and their liquid — create an elegant, garlicky soup

    Canned chickpeas — and their liquid — create an elegant, garlicky soup

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    Though many people prefer the flavor and texture of dried beans, canned beans have a leg up besides convenience. The super-starchy liquid in the can is like an ingredient itself. Reserving the liquid to add to a soup or stew as it simmers lends body and creates a creamier, velvety consistency. The cooks at Christopher Kimball’s Milk Street use the liquid to help transform canned chickpeas into an elegant pureed soup built on the beans. Slowly simmering a whole head of garlic in the soup adds sweet depth. Cumin, cayenne and garlic add a bold kick to complement the chickpeas’ earthiness, while carrots and onion add sweetness.

    Though we often prefer the flavor and texture of dried beans, canned beans have a leg up besides convenience — the super-starchy liquid in which the beans are packed is like an ingredient itself. Reserving the liquid to add to a soup or stew as it simmers lends body and creates a creamier, velvety consistency.

    We use the liquid too in this recipe from our book “Cook What You Have,” which draws on pantry staples to assemble easy, weeknight meals. It adds richness to an elegant soup built on pureed chickpeas and a whole head of slowly simmered garlic.

    Cumin, cayenne and garlic add a bold kick to complement the chickpeas’ earthiness, while carrots and onion add sweetness.

    If you own an immersion blender, you can use it to puree the soup directly in the saucepan; the texture won’t be perfectly smooth, but the flavors still will be great.

    Chickpea and Garlic Soup with Cumin-Spiced Butter

    https://www.177milkstreet.com/recipes/chickpea-garlic-soup-cumin-spiced-butter

    Start to finish: 1 hour (25 minutes active)

    Servings: 4

    5 tablespoons salted butter, cut into 1-tablespoon pieces, divided

    1 medium yellow onion, chopped

    2 medium carrots, peeled and chopped

    Kosher salt and ground black pepper

    3 teaspoons cumin seeds, divided

    ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper OR red pepper flakes, plus another ¼ teaspoon (optional)

    Two 15½-ounce cans chickpeas, 1 cup liquid reserved, rinsed and drained

    1 head garlic, outer papery skins removed, top third cut off and discarded

    1 teaspoon white OR black sesame seeds

    In a large saucepan over medium-high, melt 2 tablespoons butter. Add the onion, carrots and ½ teaspoon salt; cook, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables are lightly browned, 4 to 6 minutes. Add 1 teaspoon cumin seeds, ¼ teaspoon cayenne and ¼ teaspoon black pepper; cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 2 minutes. Add the chickpeas and the 1 cup reserved liquid, the garlic, 4 cups water and ¼ teaspoon salt. Bring to a boil over medium-high, then reduce to medium-low, cover and cook, stirring occasionally, until the garlic is soft when the head is squeezed with tongs, 30 to 35 minutes.

    Remove the pot from the heat. Squeeze the garlic cloves from the head into the chickpea mixture; discard the empty skins. Let the chickpea mixture cool for about 5 minutes.

    Meanwhile, in a small saucepan over medium-high, melt the remaining 3 tablespoons butter. Add the remaining 2 teaspoons cumin seeds and cook, stirring, until fragrant and the butter has stopped foaming, 1 to 1½ minutes. Add the sesame seeds and another ¼ teaspoon cayenne (if using); cook, stirring, until the sesame seeds are toasted and fragrant, about 1½ minutes. Remove from the heat and set aside, covered.

    Using a blender and working in batches so the jar is never more than half full, puree the chickpea mixture until smooth. Return the soup to the pan and cook over medium-low, stirring often, until warmed through, 2 to 5 minutes. (Alternatively, use an immersion blender to puree the soup directly in the saucepan.) Taste and season with salt and black pepper. Serve drizzled with the butter mixture.

    Optional garnishes: Lemon wedges OR chopped fresh cilantro OR both

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    By Christopher Kimball | Christopher Kimball’s Milk Street

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  • Meet the man who has tasted everything on the Cheesecake Factory’s ridiculously long menu

    Meet the man who has tasted everything on the Cheesecake Factory’s ridiculously long menu

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    LOS ANGELES — and jabbed his fork into a chunk of glistening cashew chicken.

    He closed his eyes for a moment, considering the texture of the dish, a longtime staple that, after a couple-year hiatus, would soon return to the chain’s menu.

    “Not as soft as I’d like it,” he told the executive chef, who nodded.

    Next, he turned to the seared ahi tuna salad, but he doesn’t like fish, so he took a single bite of lettuce and radish before confidently setting down his fork.

    “Nicely dressed. Great crunch!”

    Third up was Cajun salmon with mashed potatoes and corn. He dredged a spoonful of potatoes through the sauce and his lips wiggled from side to side. He nodded twice.

    “OK, delicious.”

    In the 46 years since he opened the first Cheesecake Factory restaurant in Beverly Hills and grew it into the behemoth of casual dining with locations across the globe, David Overton — the company’s official taster, but also its chief executive and co-founder — has built a deep trust in the profitability of his own palate.

    Overton has tasted and approved every one of the menu’s more than 250 items, which despite the factory in its name, the company likes to emphasize are prepared from scratch on site or at the company’s two bakeries.

    “What I like, millions of people like,” Overton, 77, said on a recent morning at the company’s Calabasas Hills headquarters as he weighed in on new offerings. “I have the taste buds of the common man.”

    ■■■

    Over the last few decades, as Cheesecake Factory locations popped up at malls and suburban plazas, they brought to each new corner of the country a sense that you were now in on some universal slice of Americana — a slice, it turns out, that provokes impressively fierce reactions.

    It didn’t matter if you were Tucson, Tampa or Tulsa, you, too, could now laugh with family and friends as you collectively gorged yourselves on the chain’s iconic brown bread. Before long, you, too, would come to associate the restaurant’s decor — a mashup of Egyptian-style columns, dark-wood wainscoting and ethereal murals that, when combined, exude the same over-the-top-yet-somehow-appealing vibe as a Vegas casino — with a sense of nostalgia. This would become the backdrop of birthdays and graduations and late-night meals after prom.

    You were now part of the collective experience shared by doctor and author Atul Gawande, who penned a sprawling ode to the Cheesecake Factory in the New Yorker, a Los Angeles Times food columnist, who, in a viral review in 2019, called his love of the chain “irrational and possibly pathological,” and rapper Drake, who sings about his love for the Cheesecake Factory, christening it as “a place for families that drive Camrys and go to Disney.”

    But not all of the attention is fawning.

    The chain made national headlines in 2017, when a man detonated a homemade explosive device inside a Cheesecake Factory in Pasadena. The FBI said the case remains unsolved.

    Late last year, a video went viral on TikTok of a woman refusing to get out of the car during a first date.

    “This is the Cheesecake Factory,” she says, filming herself, in what some viewers suggested was a staged scene.

    “What’s the problem with that?” he asks.

    “This is a chain restaurant.”

    Before long, someone compiled a list, which also circulated on social media, of places women should refuse to go on first dates, listing Cheesecake Factory as No. 1. (No. 2, Applebee’s; No. 15, the gym; No. 16, church.) The discourse swept the internet, earning two separate pieces in the Washington Post, and loyal fans soon swarmed to the brand’s defense on X.

    “WHO THE HELL DOES NOT WANNA GO TO THE CHEESECAKE FACTORY? BRO IF I WAS TAKEN THERE I WOULD PROPOSE,” one person posted on X (formerly Twitter).

    “I literally met my husband at the bar of a Cheesecake Factory 10 years ago,” Rachelle Tomlinson tweeted. “Stop all the slander!”

    Tomlinson, 30, was on a girls trip to Honolulu in 2014 when she visited the chain for the first time. Tomlinson recounted in an interview how she can still visualize the moment the double doors opened and she locked into a gaze with a man with hazel eyes.

    “Legit love at first sight,” her husband, Sam, recalled, saying the other thing he remembers from that night is that he drank a bunch of Mai Tais.

    Exactly a year from their Cheesecake meet cute, they got married.

    ■■■

    Growing up in Detroit, Overton said, his family could afford to eat out only once a week, usually Sundays at a deli or Chinese spot.

    His father worked at a department store and his mother sold cheesecakes she baked in the family’s basement based on a recipe found in a newspaper. Back then, there were only two varieties — original and original with strawberry topping — and Overton said he and his sister earned a penny for every bakery box they helped their mother fold.

    Years later, when Overton was in his 20s and chasing dreams of becoming a rock ‘n’ roll drummer in San Francisco, his parents, Evelyn and Oscar, tired of Detroit and a string of business ventures that never took off, decided to move west.

    They opened a small, wholesale bakery in North Hollywood, expanding their cheesecake options to include several more flavors, but the Cheesecake Factory Bakery floundered. They were in their mid-50s, working long hours and struggling to find customers who would buy in bulk.

    “I was really getting tired of all these restaurateurs that wouldn’t buy the cake,” Overton said, recalling the frustration that inspired him to start a restaurant of their own.

    On the day they opened in Beverly Hills in 1978, they began welcoming patrons at 2 p.m. and, by 2:10 p.m., Overton said, they were so busy that people had to wait to be seated — an immediate rush he attributes to divine intervention.

    “God was really watching over us,” he said. “I like to say that we had a line in 10 minutes, and it’s really never stopped for the last 45 years.”

    The company opened its second location in Marina del Rey in the early ‘80s and, in 1991, opened the first out-of-state location in Washington, D.C. The next year, the company went public — ticker symbol: CAKE — and today has more than 200 locations in the U.S., as well as several in the Middle East, Mexico and Asia.

    Cheesecake Factory locations brought in $2.5 billion of the company’s $3.3 billion in revenue in 2022, an average of about $12 million in sales at each restaurant, according to the company’s latest annual report to shareholders. (The company also owns the growing chain North Italia, acquired in 2019, as well as Fox Restaurant Concepts, whose upscale, fast casual restaurants the chain sees as a vehicle for expansion.)

    A key growth point, the report notes, has been an increase in takeout and delivery orders, which accounted for about 25% of total sales that year.

    Last year was bruising for a restaurant industry still recovering from pandemic shutdowns and buffeted by rising costs and labor shortages. But during the first nine months of 2023, the Calabasas Hills company racked up increased sales and income, and continued to expand.

    They’ve differentiated themselves with ample portions, a variety of “craveable” dishes difficult to replicate at home and the fact that they, unlike some competitors, still prepare everything from scratch at each restaurant, said Joshua Long, who follows the company in his role as managing director of the financial services firm Stephens.

    “The brand,” Long said, “has really found a spot in the hearts of consumers.”

    ■■■

    As the company grew, so did the length of the menu.

    It started as a single page, front and back, of items simple enough that, if a chef walked out on him, Overton could make them himself — a factory burger, which sold in the early days for $2.10, the Avocado Delights sandwich for $1.75, a slice of cheesecake for $1.25.

    For several years, Overton’s taste buds kept him from adding fish to the menu, and he also dragged his feet on selling steak, because of its price tag.

    “If you went on a date,” he said, “I didn’t want anybody ordering the steak and you couldn’t afford it.”

    Whenever he ate at a rival restaurant, he kept an eye out for dishes he could simplify or transform. During a meal at the Peninsula Beverly Hills years ago, he saw a menu item of cheese straws with avocado, which inspired the idea for avocado egg rolls, now a top seller.

    “How did I let the menu get so big?” Overton said. “I didn’t know what the heck I was doing. If I knew what I was doing and understood the restaurant business, it probably wouldn’t have turned out this way.”

    But it worked — and today, it’s become a key marketing tactic.

    The sheer size of the multi-page, spiral-bound menu has earned a ribbing from Ellen DeGeneres and inspired Halloween costumes and a Buzzfeed list of jokes, including one that, given the menu’s girth, and cultural relevance, compared it to the Bible.

    “We get so much PR just cause of that big menu,” Overton said, smiling. “I always say that our greatest difficulty is the size of the menu, but our greatest defense against competition is the size of our menu.”

    The menu items themselves are a cacophony of calories.

    Every year, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a nonprofit health advocacy group, releases an “Xtreme Eating Awards “ list of single restaurant dishes that contain around a full day’s worth of calories. Two Cheesecake Factory items made the latest list — an Italian combo plate at 2,800 calories and a French Dip cheeseburger with fries at 2,200.

    But when you bring up calories with Overton, he looks unfazed — decadence is part of the brand and besides, he says, people rarely finish a dish in a single sitting.

    “We’re the king of doggy bags,” he says. “I don’t pay a lot of attention to calories, because we let people choose what they want.”

    But if there’s one thing America wants more than delicious, fattening food, it’s the idea — the vow — that they will soon eat less of it. Enter: SkinnyLicious, the brand’s name for menu items with fewer than 600 calories, which they added to the menu in 2011.

    SkinnyLicious items, Overton said, account for around 15% of sales.

    ■■■

    In the winter of 1993, David Gordon, now the company’s president, was looking for a job as a restaurant manager.

    He had applied to two different places, including a Cheesecake Factory on the Westside, but was more interested in the other small chain — until he had his Cheesecake Factory interview.

    The people interviewing him ate a burger in the middle of the interview — “a little strange,” Gordon says — and steered the conversation toward the intricacies and caliber of french fries. Over 20 minutes, they discussed everything from starch levels to how hollow the fries felt when you bit into them.

    “It intrigued me,” Gordon said. “This is somewhere where quality is incredibly important.”

    Early in his career at the company, Gordon recalled asking the person in charge of operations if there was a chance he would be transferred. He was planning to buy a house in Redondo Beach, Gordon explained, but didn’t want to if he might be moved.

    “No, no, fantastic, things are great,” he recalled being told.

    But a few months later, the man in charge of operations asked him to move to Woodland Hills, promising Gordon that, within a year, he would get him back to the location closest to his home. As the year mark approached, the boss kept his commitment.

    “He cared about me as a person,” Gordon said, noting that the company still works hard to live out that ethos.

    Cheesecake Factory locations are notoriously busy, so if you’re going to ask workers to be slammed all day and prepare and serve more than 200 different items from scratch, the workers need to feel a connection to the restaurant and the people they work for, Gordon said.

    Last year, the Cheesecake Factory, whose restaurants employ about 35,000 people, was one of only two restaurant chains — Panda Express’ parent company was the second — to earn a spot on both Fortune’s 100 Best Companies to Work For and People’s Companies that Care lists, which survey employees about company culture, pay, retention, opportunities and fairness.

    Their reputation for conscientiousness took a hit in 2018 when the California Department of Industrial Relations held the company and two janitorial contractors jointly liable for more than $4 million in wage theft violations after an investigation found the contractors’ employees assigned to eight Southern California Cheesecake Factory restaurants didn’t get proper rest or meal breaks, and weren’t paid overtime while waiting for kitchen managers to review their work at the end of a shift. Although Cheesecake Factory didn’t directly employ the workers, state law dictates that companies relying on subcontractors for labor can be held liable for workplace violations.

    In January, the California Labor Commissioner’s Office announced that it had reached a $1 million settlement against the company and both contractors.

    Sidney M. Greathouse, the vice president of legal services for the Cheesecake Factory, issued a statement that said “the company denies any wrongdoing and no longer utilizes the services of the janitorial companies at issue in the case.”

    ■■■

    Today, the company sells more than 30 varieties of cheesecake, but a massive painting of one of the originals — a simple slice topped with strawberry filling — hangs above Overton’s desk in his office that looks out on the hills of Calabasas.

    Sprawled across his desk are several stacks of folders each about a foot high. He’s a few years from 80, but between work and spending time with his wife, children and grandchildren, he doesn’t have much down time.

    “I have no time for hobbies,” he says. “I don’t play golf. I don’t do any of that.”

    He thought back on his 20s, around the time he started the business, when he first learned that you didn’t have to print your signature literally, but could sign it however you wanted.

    He played around with it and, as he wrote, let emotion guide him, creating a flowing capital D, which then exploded into 14 looping, semi ovals that start big and trail off.

    “It’s an emotion,” he said. “I just felt like I was moving forward.”

    Through the years, a few people had mocked his signature, he said, including someone who wrote to him saying, “I’m so sorry, with a signature like that, I won’t be investing in your company.”

    But he stuck with it. His gut hadn’t failed him yet.

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    By Marisa Gerber | Los Angeles Times

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  • Open Door reopens its doors for meals as need for food rises

    Open Door reopens its doors for meals as need for food rises

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    With the COVID-19 pandemic receding and a project to create a new Food and Nutrition Center complete, The Open Door food pantry on Emerson Avenue restarted in-person dining for its Community Meals program in early February after a nearly four-year hiatus.

    Bringing back Community Meals to its dining area “was the last leg of the journey for us,” President and CEO Julie LaFontaine said.

    Recent in-person Community Meals have featured baked haddock, rice and zucchini, and Greek-style chicken souvlaki, lima beans, eggplant and tomato.

    Even as the numbers for in-person dining are still ramping up, the nonprofit food resource center said it saw a 30% increase in requests for food assistance across its service area from 2022 to 2023.

    This territory covers Gloucester, Rockport, Essex, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Ipswich, Rowley, Topsfield, Boxford, Hamilton and Wenham with mobile sites in Danvers and Lynn.

    The Open Door operates a food pantry in Gloucester on Emerson Avenue and the Ipswich Community Food Pantry at the Ipswich Housing Authority’s Southern Heights housing development.

    Last year, the food pantry served one in six Gloucester residents.

    Rising prices, rising need

    “We did see a 30% increase in requests for food assistance,” LaFontaine said. “So people who may have only been coming once a month came twice a month or three times a month as the need rose, as the cost of food especially rose, people found it harder and harder to keep a roof over their head, lights on, and food on the table. It was just a juggling act.”

    While it’s not true for everyone who uses the food pantry, the spike in the cost of living was a contributing factor to the household instability Open Door staff have seen.

    “The good news is that it’s a story of hope as people recover … people are getting back to work, and people are starting to climb out of the hole that the increase in cost created,” LaFontaine said.

    Last year, The Open Door provided 1.98 million pounds of food which equates to 1.65 million meals to 9,836 individuals in 4,952 households, according to its most recent fact sheet.

    It saw 77,400 visits and its kitchen prepared 91,700 Community Meals, including Meals To-Go, Senior Soup and Salad at the Rose Baker Senior Center in Gloucester, and other community meal programs, including 6,500 meals delivered by volunteers.

    In addition, The Open Door served 15,300 summer meals to children last summer.

    Its Mobile Market served 3,289 people 187,000 pounds of food in 2023.

    And 28% of food distributed last year consisted of fresh produce. The Ipswich Community Food Pantry served 562 individuals 149,000 pounds of food, while the Gloucester pantry served 5,371 people 1.3 million pounds of food.

    Ways to dine

    On hand Thursday in the Open Door kitchen in Gloucester were Dan Trimble of Salem, the food services manager, and executive chef Thomas Riordan, who previously owned Ripple on the Water in Essex.

    Prep cook Kenn Taber of Gloucester and others were busy preparing a savory dish of ramen noodles with stock that included seaweed, dried mushrooms, pork and chicken that had been simmered overnight in a large tilt skillet in the facility’s brand new commercial kitchen.

    The Open Door offers many ways for its clients to dine, either in-person, to-go, or having their meals delivered, LaFontaine said. That’s in addition to being able to order groceries online and being able to pick them up.

    “All of those choices mirror how we get our food in a socially acceptable way,” she said. The in-person Community Meals give people one more way to connect.

    One of the greatest stories of the pandemic was the way people stepped up to help “and that hasn’t stopped.” The way the food pantry operates may have changed, but that has not lessened the need for volunteers. The fulfillment center has 170 volunteer slots each week that need to be filled to pick and pack groceries, LaFontaine said.

    “And, bringing back community meals is so important because people are hungry not just in their bodies, but also in their spirits and the companionship they find around the table really makes the difference for so many people,” she said.

    Free in-person dining at The Open Door, 28 Emerson Ave., is available Monday through Friday from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., with extra meals available to-go for the weekend. Free Meals To-Go are available Monday through Wednesday from 3 to 5 p.m., and from Thursday to Friday from 3 to 6 p.m. at the food pantry. To learn more, go to foodpantry.org.

    Ethan Forman may be contacted at 978-675-2714, or at eforman@gloucestertimes.com.

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    By Ethan Forman | Staff Writer

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  • SENIOR LOOKOUT: Tips for battling viral gastroenteritis

    SENIOR LOOKOUT: Tips for battling viral gastroenteritis

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    When I was a kid, there were two types of illness in our household. If it was a respiratory illness, you had a cold. It was either a “head cold” and a minor inconvenience, or it was the dreaded “chest cold” and the victim was a very sick kid. If it was a stomach or intestinal illness, it was the “flu.” A kid with the flu was put on the sofa with a glass of warm ginger ale, some saltine crackers and a bucket.

    Now I know that what we called the “flu” was probably viral gastroenteritis, an intestinal infection marked by watery diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nausea or vomiting, and sometimes fever. Viral gastroenteritis is extremely infectious, often passing from person to person because an infected person did not wash his or her hands after using the bathroom. Viral gastroenteritis symptoms usually appear one to three days after you’re infected and can range from mild to severe. Symptoms usually last just a day or two, but occasionally they may persist as long as 10 days.

    A basically healthy person is likely recover without complications. But for infants, older adults and people with compromised immune systems, viral gastroenteritis can be deadly.

    The best way to prevent the spread of intestinal infections is to follow these precautions:

    Wash your hands thoroughly and rinse thoroughly. Carry sanitizing wipes and hand sanitizer for times when soap and water aren’t available.

    Use separate personal items around your home. Avoid sharing eating utensils, drinking glasses and plates. Use separate towels in the bathroom.

    Keep your distance. Avoid close contact with anyone who has the virus, if possible.

    Disinfect hard surfaces. If someone in your home has viral gastroenteritis, disinfect hard surfaces, such as counters, faucets and doorknobs.

    The most likely complication of viral gastroenteritis is dehydration. Infants, older adults and people with suppressed immune systems may become severely dehydrated when they lose more fluids than they can replace. Hospitalization might be needed so that lost fluids can be replaced intravenously.

    To help keep a person with viral gastroenteritis more comfortable and prevent dehydration while they recover, try the following:

    Stop eating solid foods for a few hours.

    Try sucking on ice chips or taking small sips of water, clear soda, clear broths or noncaffeinated sports drinks. Drink plenty of liquid every day, taking small, frequent sips.

    Ease back into eating. Gradually begin to eat bland, easy-to-digest foods, such as soda crackers, toast, gelatin, bananas, rice and chicken. Stop eating if your nausea returns.

    Avoid dairy products, caffeine, alcohol, nicotine, and fatty or highly seasoned foods.

    Get plenty of rest. The illness and dehydration may have made you weak and tired.

    Be cautious with medications. If you are concerned about a medication, contact the prescribing doctor to get advice.

    How do you know when it’s time to see the doctor? If the person with viral gastroenteritis is an adult, call the doctor if the person:

    Is not able to keep liquids down for 24 hours.

    Has been vomiting for more than two days.

    Vomiting blood

    Is dehydrated. Signs of dehydration include excessive thirst, dry mouth, deep yellow urine or little or no urine, and severe weakness, dizziness or lightheadedness

    There is blood in his or her bowel movements

    Has a fever above 104 F (40 C).

    Viral gastroenteritis can be dangerous to older adults. The adult immune system tends to become less efficient later in life. If you have an older person in your life who develops nausea and, or diarrhea, keep a close eye on him or her. Make sure the person takes in fluids, and don’t be afraid to call the doctor if you have concerns.

    Tracy Arabian is the communications officer at SeniorCare Inc., a local agency on aging that serves Gloucester, Beverly, Essex, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Rockport, Topsfield and Wenham.

    Tracy Arabian is the communications officer at SeniorCare Inc., a local agency on aging that serves Gloucester, Beverly, Essex, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Rockport, Topsfield and Wenham.

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    Senior Lookout | Tracy Arabian

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  • We tried 13 meal delivery services, here are our reviews

    We tried 13 meal delivery services, here are our reviews

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    MINNEAPOLIS — It’s been almost six years since I gave up my Blue Apron subscription. I was a regular meal-kit user, but after having a baby, I found that I couldn’t keep up with the weekly deliveries of groceries and their corresponding recipes.

    When my spouse suggested recently that we start using meal kits again, with the aim of bringing some consistency to our weekly grocery budget, I assumed we’d go back to Blue Apron. Then I did an online search, and found dozens of new players in the market.

    I tried 13 of them.

    Not only were there different formats — prepared meals, partially prepared dishes, gourmet groceries that get slapped together into meals with some guidance — but there were so many different flavors. It wasn’t all just sautéed chicken breasts and potatoes, though there was plenty of that, too. We enjoyed ramen and tagine, bulgogi and Beef Wellington. Even birthday cake.

    Starting out: To pull this off, I took advantage of signup deals (Important: never start out paying full price). I succumbed to mouthwatering advertisements, dealt with buggy apps, forgot to skip some deliveries and wound up with a fridge overflowing with food, and made some amazing meals.

    A note about prices: Prices can vary widely. With add-ons, upcharges and freely distributed coupon codes, it’s hard to predict exactly what a box of food will cost from week to week (and it’s also why we didn’t include prices). The services no doubt benefit from that fuzziness. Blue Apron, CookUnity and Marley Spoon, for example, all average about $15 per serving, when you include shipping and other fees. Ultimately, expect that a weekly delivery of three meals serving two people will cost somewhere between $60 and $90.

    How to choose: The best service will be subjective to your family’s circumstances. We found that a mix of prepared meals, gourmet groceries and you-be-the-chef kits worked for us.

    I am still a member of three services. Is that sustainable? No. Is there a cardboard box tower in my garage? Most definitely. Have I saved money? Not likely. But I have managed to shake up my family’s meal-planning repertoire, exposed my kids to some new flavors, and had a lot of fun doing it.

    Here’s what you can expect from 13 meal delivery services.

    blueapron.com The first breakout star in the meal kit world is still standing. It has changed a lot since those early times, when the recipes were crowd-pleasing basics. Now there are more dishes with varying difficulty levels. The possibilities are endless: healthy meals, put-stuff-in-the-pan-and-bake meals, frozen dinners. I was blown away by the ramen, which had so many components, down to the perfectly soft-boiled egg. The packaging was minimal, and the ingredients were of high quality, like Brodo brand chicken broth. I also liked the subtle shortcuts. For example, instead of sending garlic cloves and a nub of ginger, my box had a package of “sautéed aromatics” that I ripped open and squeezed into the pan. Saving a little time on chopping: much appreciated.

    marleyspoon.com Maybe it’s just Martha Stewart’s charisma, but this service delighted me. The app and website are easy to use, transparent about prices (no small feat) and filled to the brim with gorgeous-looking recipes. I was most taken by the variety; these are not just for dinner. Meals can be breakfast (overnight oats), even dessert. Yes, I ordered a birthday cake. The delivery was the most confusing part; all of the produce came together in one little box, like someone had just filled it up at the farmers market. Cute, but it took time to sort things out by recipe. and some vegetables were so overripe they were leaky and a bit smelly. (They credited my account when I lodged a complaint through the app.)

    hellofresh.com The first subscription I canceled is an otherwise popular one. There were a few too many shortcuts, to the point where I felt like I wasn’t doing any cooking, even when I wanted to. For example, I ordered an empanada meal I thought would appeal to my kids. What I received was a bag of frozen mini empanadas I could have bought at the store, a pouch of pre-sliced apples, and a bladder of yellow cheese sauce that looked like it came out of a pump. The dinner entrée, a baked mashed potato casserole, was heavy. and when I ordered a four-serving meal, they sent four plastic packets of every item — four bags of chives, four bags of cheese, etc. Environmentally, it didn’t feel right.

    greenchef.com An all-organic, nutritious and a little more grown-up offering from HelloFresh. Just browsing the app felt like a healthy act. (And looking at all those greens, I knew not to bother trying to find recipes my kids would eat.) You can choose your meals by diet — low-carb, high-protein, keto, etc. Breakfast egg bites, smoothies and protein shakes were available as add-ons at checkout. The recipes offered more global flavors than its sister company, and while it nudged me in the Mediterranean direction with its suggestions, I enjoyed swapping my selections for 10-minute salads, Moroccan turkey tagine and fish tacos.

    gobble.com Chopping vegetables is one of my least favorite activities, so I was drawn to this brand by the promise that their “sous chef” would do the prep work for me. Instead, I got whole veggies that needed to be scrubbed and peeled, while the primary components of the dish — the ones I actually wanted to put my own stamp on — were already cooked. Pot roast arrived as chunks of meat in a plastic bag, reminding me too much of canned stew; mashed potatoes were sent to me cooked and in pouches. On the flip side, the one prechopped vegetable, cauliflower, had turned to mush before I’d had a chance to use it. (They did credit my account after I wrote them an email.)

    hungryroot.com Imagine Trader Joe’s delivered. If you find that idea thrilling, you might like these grocery boxes. Hungryroot carries a line of its own products, a la TJ’s, that offer shortcuts to faster meals, like precooked grains and chopped veggies. They also sell brands that you won’t find at your average supermarket, which makes snack shopping feel like Christmas. French pot de crème? Yes, please. What’s innovative here is that you can select recipes that will auto-fill your shopping cart with the necessary ingredients. It’s easy to make swaps and adjustments to your cart. Pricing is abstract; you pay for a certain number of credits, then use the credits to shop. It feels like an arcade game, one that can get sneakily expensive.

    littlespoon.com This one is for the kiddos, though no one will stop you from sneaking a few bites. Compartmentalized dishware (it’s all recyclable) comes filled with deconstructed meals acceptable to an evolving palate. Lunchers contain make-your-own pizzas and PB&Js packed with protein and hidden veggies; Plates have some more sophisticated bites, such as edamame and quinoa. For the really little ones, there are smoothies and purées. We’ve been in a snack rut lately, so an add-on snack pack, with Little Spoon’s own brand of sweet (but not too sweet) treats was exciting at first, until my too-smart-for-his-own-good kindergartner figured out that “confetti dip” was actually puréed squash. Still, anything that gets my kids to try something new is working miracles. I only wish the plates were compostable.

    cookunity.com These premade meals are designed by chefs we’re meant to know. You can look up their bios and find their restaurants in other cities, which makes eating at home feel more connected to the wider restaurant world. I was intrigued to try dishes from two New York chefs, Einat Admony of Balaboosta and Esther Choi of Mŏkbar, and “Top Chef” contestant Fabio Viviani. Big props to the packaging: Compostable containers of fresh food arrive in a reusable insulated bag, forgoing the cardboard box entirely. The only negative, besides the $15-per-meal price tag? Many of the dishes I ordered had close to 1,000 calories. The site does make it easy to sort for meals with less than that; I’ll pay better attention next time.

    factor75.com What wowed me the first week grew tedious by the third week. These fresh (not frozen) premade meals from the HelloFresh group, aimed at people on keto diets, are hearty, healthy and packed with vegetables. But they quickly become repetitive. The grilled salmon, for instance, tastes exactly the same whether it’s served over cauliflower “grits” or braised kale. When I realized I was paying $13 for a meal as exciting to me as a Lean Cuisine, I pulled the plug. If variety is a big thing in your house (as it is in mine), skip it. But for people for whom food is merely fuel, these filling meals are nutritious and require no work, just a two-minute blitz in the microwave.

    earnestprovisions.com Former restaurant chef Jeff Lakatos went solo last year with his meal service, which provides two a la carte menus per week for delivery or pickup in Mendota Heights. There is a main (your choice of meat or vegetarian), a couple of vegetable-forward sides, and a kids’ version that isn’t dumbed down. The week I ordered, we had a vegetarian shepherd’s pie made with lentils, an arugula salad with roasted grapes, and for the kids, beef and pork meatballs in gravy with mashed potatoes. Everything was packed in aluminum containers that went right into the oven for half an hour, infusing the house with all the good smells of a homemade dinner. If I didn’t live so far from Mendota Heights, I’d order again.

    letsdish.com This local company sells what it calls “barely lift a finger” meals in its stores. The partially cooked components are packed in separate bags, frozen and sold in one package. The shops carry more than 80 selections. A pasta dish came together incredibly fast, with frozen, par-baked pasta, a pouch of vodka sauce and precooked chicken and sausage. White chicken chili was ready to go; my job was to turn cornbread mix into a freshly baked side dish. Because these come frozen, you can stock your freezer with them at once, rather than relying on a weekly order. and they’re economical: A three-serving meal pack cost me $20. Locations in Eden Prairie, Prior Lake, Apple Valley, Maple Grove and Woodbury;

    parisdiningclub.com When Minneapolis’ Grand Cafe closed during the pandemic, chef Jamie Malone pivoted to issuing boxes of provisions that looked like precious, pink-paper-wrapped presents, filled with fine things like sourdough loaves, salty French butter and stuffed lobster. She has since turned those boxes into a calling card, now as Paris Dining Club. Subscribe for monthly dinners (starting at $60) or order a one-off; the menus are inspired by different regions of France, and often include some of the Grand Cafe’s greatest hits. Malone will even rent you some fabulous dishware on which to serve them.

    table22.com This national company facilitates the sale and delivery of meals-in-a-box from top restaurants around the country, including our own Martina, Union Hmong Kitchen, Alma, Colita, France 44, Cardamom and Petite Leon. Subscribe for a new menu each month. When I had a newborn, these ready-to-heat-and-eat meals were how I stayed in touch with the part of myself that had previously been able to freely leave the house for a nice dinner. Instead, it was like having a fine meal catered in, just for me. The drawbacks: price, which can go up to $150 per shipment; a nearly monthlong gap between ordering and receiving, and the mystery of not knowing what you’re getting until the box has arrived.

    Does convenience cost more? A Marley Spoon meal averages $30 for two servings. We shopped for the same ingredients at Cub (via Instacart). See how it compared.

    Turkey Smash Gyros & Oven Fries

    2 potatoes: $2.20

    1 red onion: $2.68

    Garlic: $1.75

    1 plum tomato: 70 cents

    1 cucumber: $1.49

    10-ounce package ground turkey: $6.99 (for 16 ounces)

    1/4 ounce gyro spice: $3.69 for 3.25 ounces Greek seasoning

    2 Mediterranean pitas: $3.99 (for 6 pitas)

    1 package hummus: $5.99 (for 10 ounces Baba’s hummus)

    4 ounces tzatziki: $6.99 (for 8 ounces)

    2 ounces feta: $4.59 (for 4 ounces crumbled)

    Cub shopping list: $38.40. You get more in quantity, but if you’re only cooking for one or two, you might not want the extra ingredients anyway.

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    By Sharyn Jackson | Star Tribune

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  • This is the easiest baklava you’ll ever make

    This is the easiest baklava you’ll ever make

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    Baklava is just right this time of year, when we’ve eaten our fill of holiday candies and cookies, but are still craving something sweet. Chock-full of nuts and laced with aromatics and honey, this iconic pastry of Greece, Turkey and the Balkans is satisfying without being cloying. It’s a treat that’s just as good with morning coffee as it is with a dollop of whipped cream for dessert.

    I’m not much of a baker, so I’m always seeking hacks. The other day, I landed on this shortcut recipe for baklava by chef Einat Admony, featured in the 2018 cookbook “Food52 Genius Desserts: 100 Recipes That Will Change the Way You Bake.” Instead of being layered in a pan, the pastry is rolled up around the nut filling, then sliced into discs like cinnamon rolls. Drizzled with orange- and cardamom-infused honey syrup, it emerges shatteringly crisp and gooey while the roasty flavor of the nuts shines through.

    Though the process may seem time-consuming, it’s really not fussy. I find the repetitive task of brushing the layers of phyllo with butter to be meditative and the results well worth the effort. Plus, baklava is delicious straight from the oven and will taste just fine the next day or even a couple of days after it’s baked.

    While any kind of nut will work — pistachios, walnuts, pecans — our locally grown hazelnuts from the American Hazelnut Co. really shine here. They’re smaller than the larger filberts from Oregon or Turkey and have a deeper, more robust flavor. Because they’re roasted before being packaged, there’s no need to toast them to remove the bitter pith before using.

    Pinwheel baklava is just as finger-licking sticky and luscious as the traditional version, plus it’s easier to serve.

    Baklava Pinwheels

    Makes about 24 pieces.

    Note: Be sure to fully thaw the phyllo in the refrigerator and to chill the syrup in advance of pouring it on top of the pastry when you pull it hot from the oven. This step allows the baklava to fully absorb all the honeyed goodness. Once the phyllo has thawed, remove any you don’t need for the recipe, reroll, wrap in plastic and refreeze up to 2 months. Find local hazelnuts through the American Hazelnut Co. ( americanhazelnutcompany.com), a collective of Midwest hazelnut farmers. From Beth Dooley.

    For the syrup:

    1 c. granulated sugar

    1/2 c. water

    3 tbsp. honey

    1 (2-in.) strip orange zest

    1 whole cardamom pod

    For the baklava pinwheels:

    12 oz. toasted hazelnuts, pistachios, walnuts or pecans

    1/4 c. powdered sugar

    Generous pinch ground cardamom

    1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon

    1/2 lb. (1/2 package) frozen phyllo dough, thawed (see Note)

    1/2 c. (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted

    To make the syrup: In a saucepan, combine the sugar, water, honey, orange zest and cardamom. Set over low heat and bring to a simmer, stirring until the sugar has dissolved, about 5 to 8 minutes.

    Remove from the heat and allow to cool. Pour into an airtight container, cover and refrigerate until chilled, or overnight.

    To make the baklava pinwheels: Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

    In a food processor, pulse the nuts with the powdered sugar, cardamom and cinnamon, until ground.

    Lay 3 sheets of the phyllo dough on a flat surface, stacked on top of one another, with one of the short sides close to you. As you work, cover the remaining sheets with a damp kitchen towel to keep them from drying out.

    Generously brush the top layer of phyllo with butter. Spread some of the nut mixture on the phyllo and pack it down. Roll the 3 phyllo sheets together away from you to form a log. Repeat with the remaining phyllo dough and nut mixture. Place the rolls seam-side down on a baking sheet or flat pan and place in the freezer for about 12 minutes; this makes them easier to cut.

    Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Remove phyllo logs from the freezer. Set the rolls on a cutting board; using a serrated knife, cut them into 2-inch slices. Arrange the slices cut-side up and spaced apart on the parchment-lined baking sheet. Bake until golden brown, about 30 minutes.

    Remove from the oven and while still warm, transfer the baklava and arrange cut-side up, snugly, in a serving dish. Discard the orange zest and cardamom pod from the syrup and pour over the baklava. Allow to cool completely before serving. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to a week or freeze for up to 1 month.

    Beth Dooley is the author of “The Perennial Kitchen.”

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    By Beth Dooley | Star Tribune

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