It’s been quite a busy year since we launched TASTE in February. It’s been only 10 months but feels much longer, am I right? We debunked the myth of San Marzano tomatoes, tracked down the Galloping Gourmet outside Seattle, and learned how to make an extremely large cinnamon roll. There were deep dives into braising goat, the gâteau Basque, and the enigmatic hippie sandwich. We tested out sous-vide circulators, air fryers, Instant Pots, and smoking guns. And hung out with a bunch of cool authors, chefs, writers, and Chrissy Teigen’s rad mom. So what does this all mean? Well, for starters, it means picking our 20 favorite stories is pretty much near impossible. All stories on TASTE are special to us. They are like our children. But we are also children! Ten-month-old children. Anyways, we look forward to bringing more TASTE to you in 2018. —Matt Rodbard, Editor in Chief
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The Fake Rolex of Canned Foods
San Marzano tomatoes are prized for their balanced flavor and distinct tomato-iness. Yet as home cooks become more and more enchanted with the Italian variety, questions arise over what exactly is in that can with the San Marzano label.
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Cooking’s New Minimalism
Gone are complicated sauces and bloated menu descriptions. Here are meal kits and unflinchingly cool, back-to-basics recipes. But does this movement toward pared-down eating help us understand the future of home cooking?
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Let’s Call It Assimilation Food
What happens when immigrants have to adapt to cooking in a new home? A new cuisine, forged from sensory memories and new ingredients.
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The Kosher Salt Question
Prized for its purity and flaky texture, kosher salt has been a home-cooking standard for decades. But the two major brands, Diamond Crystal and Morton, are very different products. Your ruined meatballs can attest.
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Celery Was the Avocado Toast of the Victorian Era
Stored in fancy vases. Cooked with care and finesse. Served in the Titanic’s first-class cabin. There were days when celery was not just boring crudité, but a luxury.
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The Untold Story of the Lady From Louisville and the Bubbe Who Wasn't There
The Atomic Age Jewish cookbook Love and Knishes was written in a voice so skeptical, so long-suffering, so unapologetically, unfashionably Jewish that you could only imagine its author, Sara Kasdan, as an old woman living on the fifth floor of a Lower East Side tenement. But that was far from Sara Kasdan’s story.
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Women Aren’t Ruining Food
Why do we get so collectively annoyed by food and drink trends that we associate with women? Because it’s an ugly double standard.
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A Cake That Demands an Oven of Its Own
Baumkuchen is a centuries-old staple of German weddings and Christmases, but it’s getting harder to find. Except one place.
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Appalachian Masala
On a North Carolina mountainside, the chefs of Chai Pani introduce us to an exciting new era of Indian-American home cooking.
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Cooking in the 1980s
A blood-splashed culinary school binder recalls the timelessness of French culinary pedagogy and the bold awfulness of ’80s restaurant food.
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Mission: Make an Extremely Large Cinnamon Roll
With help from Dominique Ansel and the executive chef at Cinnabon.
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My New York Kitchen Residency
A summer in New York City gives one West Coaster reason to look at the fruit closely.
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Getting the Veggie Burger Recipe Right
Developing a decent meatless burger recipe is hard. It’s why so many of them are terrible.
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The Thing About Bisquick
For some, a box of Bisquick is a magical path to baking bliss. For others, it represents a corner not worth cutting. And possibly something more sinister.
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Peanut Butter Beautiful
For kids learning to cook for themselves, a mistake is sometimes the secret ingredient.
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Elbowing for Scallops With Melissa Clark
Cookbook author and dogged journalist Melissa Clark is the voice of American home cooking. And she’s here to stir the pot.
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Before Guy, There Was Graham
In his brief but influential television career, Graham Kerr taught people to cook heartily, with lots of clarified butter, and laugh even harder.
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Why Are There No Eggs in Some Indian Cakes?
For the best pineapple cake, just say no to eggs.
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The Library Has Secrets
In San Antonio, a cookbook collection has plenty to tell us about a fascinating, complex, and frequently misunderstood cuisine.
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Salt Potatoes Have Been Around a Lot Longer Than Syracuse
These salt-encrusted spuds are usually attributed to western New York, but the unusual cooking method has been used for hundreds of years in some corners of the world.
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The Baker’s Baked Good
Classically plain Jane, the gâteau Basque continues to pop up at some of the more interesting restaurants and bakeries.