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Recipes for Adding Spring Mushrooms to Your Weekly Meal Plan

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A green bowl on a green table holds cheesy grits inside mixed with small blossoms and springtime mushrooms with uncooked mushrooms all around the bowl.

Enoki, oyster, morels, hen of the woods, and chanterelles are mushrooms you can find during the spring season. Each one of these miraculous treats of nature provides a different flavor, texture, and umami profile to every recipe they combine into. While it may be easiest to run to the grocery store and grab the first white mushrooms you see, we recommend exploring what this unique world of fungi has to offer. Maybe you’ll use a handful of different wild mushrooms for your stock or you’ll hone in on a specific type to fill a taco shell. (Use a reputable guide to help with species identification.) No matter your choice, you’ll find comfort in enjoying all Mother Earth provides.

Spring Mushroom Recipes

Mushroom Stock

A stock pot with a variety of mushrooms and vegetables in a brown stock, with a wooden spoon in the upper left corner and some pepper and seasonings on a plate in the upper right corner.

Though we’re heading out of winter soup season, a mushroom stock is great to save for cooking beef, casseroles, and so much more. The key to this recipe is using a variety of mushrooms available year-round and in spring like button, crimini, oyster, and shiitake.

Mushrooms Rockefeller

A close-up view of a variety of mushrooms in different shapes and sizes.

Mushroom caps full of a spinach mixture featuring plenty of seasonings, cream cheese, garlic, shallot, and a dash of hot sauce. These little decadent treats only get more delicious when you top them with seasoned breadcrumbs, Parmesan cheese, or crumbled bacon.

Cheesy Grits with Springtime Mushrooms

A green bowl on a green table holds cheesy grits inside mixed with small blossoms and springtime mushrooms with uncooked mushrooms all around the bowl.

Morel, hen of the woods, and brick cap mushrooms are all spring varieties that have their moment for but a season before going away. Take advantage of their unique nuances with a bowl full of Cheesy Grits that also incorporates chive and thyme blossoms on top.

Crispy Mushroom Bundles with Spicy Mayo

Various crispy mushroom bundles sit on a brown plate beside a small bowl of spicy mayo beside two green cups and two forks.

Little bundles of enoki or seafood mushrooms are best found in cooler weather whenever it’s the early days of spring. We’re frying these crispy mushrooms and wrapping them with a piece of nori before dipping them into a homemade spicy siracha mayonnaise.

Buttered Mushroom Tartine

Buttered Mushroom Tartine on two separate plates with mushrooms in one plate and a dip sauce in another

Whenever it comes to cooking with mushrooms, its best to let these gems shine. Our Buttered Mushroom Tartine showcases button mushrooms at their best with a blend of pistachio pesto, balsamic vinegar, goat cheese, as well as fontina cheese all on a slice of lightly toasted bread.

Smoked Mushroom Vegetarian Tacos With Creamy Chipotle Sauce

Vegetarian mushroom tacos on a plate.

Vegetarian tacos don’t have to rely on cauliflower or tofu. Instead, let your favorite variety of spring mushrooms take over and layer on pico de gallo as well as a creamy chipolte sauce. Then, finish with whatever else your heart desires and a squeeze of lime over top of it all.

Rabbit Confit with Chanterelle Mushrooms and Eggplant Compote

Rabbit Confit with Chanterelle Mushrooms and Eggplant Compote on an orange plate with two dishes of sauces at the top of the plate

Looking for a luxurious way to upgrade chanterelle mushrooms? A rabbit confit provides the perfect base for buttery mushrooms and a savory eggplant compote. We even give you a step-by-step process for assembling your dinner plates. Go the extra mile by garnishing the dish with wild watercress or wild arugula.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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Implied Desire Is Made Explicit in ‘Wuthering Heights’

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Margot Robbie in Wuthering Heights standing in a white gown.
A graphic for the Wuthering Heights movie.

Emerald Fennell’s bold and artful interpretation of Wuthering Heights uses the classic novel as a jumping-off point. The result is a film that’s distinctly of the moment.

Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights

Adaptations of literature, whether high or low, often choose one side of a binary. They are either faithful adaptations that aim at preserving a novel’s intent (think of the fealty in Guillermo del Toro’s recent take on Frankenstein) or loose interpretations updating a tale to modern times (see the teen-targeted versions of classics popular in the ’90s, such as Clueless or 10 Things I Hate About You).

Those choices, however, do not always yield the finest results. While there are strong examples of each approach, many undeniable classics take ample liberties with their source material. All-time greats including Jaws, The Shining and Psycho are less “adapted from” as they are “inspired by.”

Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights belongs in that camp. The proper nouns of the novel are present: Cathy and Heathcliff, Thrushcross Grange and the titular Wuthering Heights. So, too, are the rainy, windswept atmosphere and the dim light of the novel. Beyond those elements and several key story beats, however, there isn’t all that much of Emily Brontë’s gothic tragedy present on screen — and plenty of what does appear is worlds away from the stark, bleak world of the novel.

In this case, that’s a good thing. A faithful Wuthering Heights is certainly possible (though it might have to be a miniseries), but it would not have the electricity, artful flourishes and salacious thrills of Fennell’s film. Traditionalists, step aside: This is Wuthering Heights for 2026.

Robbie and Elordi are Catherine and Heathcliff Unbound

Here, adopted ward Heathcliff (Jacob Elordi) and downtrodden heiress Catherine (Margot Robbie) become star-crossed lovers as circumstance and stubbornness hold them apart. Devoted to one another as children, they grow into young adults reluctant to pursue one another’s affections. With a father (Martin Clunes) who drinks and gambles away the family fortune, a companion (Hong Chau) who acts like a governess and a house defined by decay, the notion of love seems alien.

Until, that is, Catherine has a brush with the finer things in life. Recovering from a sprained ankle in the posh home of bachelor Edgar Linton (Shazad Latif), Catherine sees a chance at comfort and pleasure — and an escape from her own dire fortunes. Her interest in Linton comes as a betrayal by Heathcliff; when he vanishes, she marries her drab but devoted neighbor, moving into a life where she is more doll than woman.

The film renders this literally, as her sort-of-sister-in-law Isabella (Alison Oliver) crafts an unsettling figurine of Catherine and places it in a scale model of their mansion. It’s appropriately eerie — as is the wallpaper that they model after Catherine’s cheeks, complete with freckles and veins.

Fennell focuses on such anatomic details (with more fascination than prurience) throughout Wuthering Heights, creating a meditation on the physical sensations of desire and discomfort. Bold choices abound; this is a film that never misses an opportunity for invention. While its narrative may be somewhat muted by a sense of inevitability, Wuthering Heights is a sensory delight — and a worthy, if wicked, interpretation.

Elsewhere at the Multiplex: Goats and Gunplay

The animated film Goat, about a diminutive, caprine basketball player, comes from Sony Pictures Imageworks. That group is responsible for the visual style of the Spider-Verse films, as well as last year’s hit KPop Demon Hunters — so Goat will certainly look good. Will it have the heart and wit of its predecessors? Head to the cinema to find out, preferably with a hoop-friendly young person in tow

Hopefully, a strong cast can elevate the thriller Crime 101 beyond its (perhaps deliberately) uninspiring title. The Amazon/MGM release stars Chris Hemsworth, Halle Berry, Mark Ruffalo, Jennifer Jason Leigh and many moreNEON is releasing Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie, based on the similarly named Canadian comedy series, in select theaters this weekend. No, the film has nothing to do with Kurt Cobain’s band. Rather, it’s a mockumentary about a pair of friends determined to become rock stars despite lacking all the required talent

If you’re in the Pittsburgh area, sort out the Oscar season contenders and pretenders with me this Sunday afternoon. I’ll be a part of the second annual “Oscar Talk” event at the Lindsay Theater in Sewickley, alongside my fellow critics Lindsey Bahr, Megan McLachlan and Amanda Waltz. We’ll tell you which movies you actually should watch before Oscar night (catch up with Hamnet, for one) and which you can safely skip (F1, it’s an honor just to be nominated).

Story by Sean Collier
Photo Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures’ Wuthering Heights

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A Marriage Made in Heaven

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A candlelit outdoor wedding reception table at Villa Santa Cruz in Todos Santos, Mexico, featuring vibrant floral centerpieces and a Mariachi band in the background.
Amanda Alexander and Justin Quintana celebrated their love match in Baja California and it was lovely indeed!

How do you know when you’ve met the right person? That special someone with whom you want to spend the rest of your life? Shared interests would be high on the list. Or that sense that – pardon the movie reference – you complete each other, in a wonderfully ying and yang way. All of that was true for Amanda Alexander and Justin Quintana but perhaps the clencher was the four-paw test.

A Marriage Made in Heaven

Not only did Amanda fall in love with Peach – Justin’s just-turned four-year old pooch – but he reciprocated the feeling for her 10-year old dog Blue. And in a “this must be it” moment, the dogs have fallen madly in love with each other and are inseparable.

The exterior of Villa Santa Cruz in Todos Santos, Mexico, featuring traditional terracotta roof tiles and lush tropical greenery along a stone path.

Perhaps it’s not surprising, because when you meet Amanda and Justin the powerful connection between them is clear. Not only are they now life partners but they also work together at Peyote Bird, the Santa Fe, New Mexico-based business started by Amanda’s father Mark Alexander in 1974 and home to an unrivalled collection of both artisan-crafted jewelry and one-of-a-kind vintage pieces.

Vibrant pink bougainvillea flowers climbing an earthy, terracotta-colored textured wall at Villa Santa Cruz in Mexico.

Sun, Color and Happiness

For their early December wedding, a location filled with sun and color was a must. The couple chose Villa Santa Cruz, an idyllic spot located squarely between the Baja desert and the Pacific Ocean in 20 acres of jaw dropping landscape. Like Amanda and Justin, this spot in Todos Santos Mexico is relaxed with a vibe that that’s equal parts bohemian and tranquil.

A bride in a floral lace wedding gown ascending a decorative tiled staircase at Villa Santa Cruz in Todos Santos, Mexico.

Working with Gemini Event Planning, Amanda and Justin wanted a destination wedding that worked with the stunning landscape, not against it. Color was key whether in floral arrangements of vibrant pinks, reds, yellows, and orange for the actual day or a Full Moon Fiesta the night before where guests dressed in celestial whites and shimmering silver to echo the super full moon that night. The lightness and brightness was balanced with a floral palette of deep purples, burgundies, and crimson hues in orchids and poppies.

A groom in a light blue suit and orange boutonniere walking down an outdoor concrete staircase framed by large tropical green leaves.

A Nod to Fashion

The bridesmaids chose their own dresses for the wedding, opting for elegant and simple silk sheaths in tones of pinks, umber, burnt orange, and olive green and wearing block heels, wedges, or even boots in a stylish nod to practicality and the grass and gravel paths that awaited them. Hair was simple in loose waves and halfway up and makeup was what Amanda called ‘light beautiful.’

A wedding guest in a light grey suit and white straw hat smiling while holding a cocktail at an outdoor ceremony on the main villa lawn.

Elegant simplicity was the rule for the men as well. They wore light blue suits paired with classic white shirts and cognac brown boots or loafers and color-corresponding belts. To complete the look the groom provided his six groomsmen with ties and boutonnieres.

Wedding guests seated on wooden benches on the lush lawn of Villa Santa Cruz during an outdoor ceremony in Todos Santos, Mexico.

For Love of Food and Wine

Both Justin and Amanda share a love for food and wine which Villa Santa Cruz delivers with a farm to table approach. With its own garden, the resort creates curated menus that lean into the produce they grow themselves as well as an abundance of fresh fish and seafood.

The rehearsal dinner was family-style at the beachfront Green Room (the name comes from a surfing term of riding inside the ‘barrel’ of a breaking wave) where the food is inspired by Baja surf culture. Guests helped themselves to platters of Salsipuedes Temaris – thinly sliced salmon, tuna, and yellowtail served sashimi-style on rice with wasabi guacamole, chipotle mayo and microgreens – tacos, and tostadas including tempura-fried shrimp and sliced fresh tuna and shrimp, followed by Pescadero Beach Skewers – flank steak, salmon, and shrimp skewers marinated in a spicy Thai glaze.

A candlelit outdoor wedding reception dinner at night featuring long wooden tables, vibrant floral arrangements, and guests engaged in conversation under warm lighting.

The wedding ceremony was officiated by Amanda’s brother Jackson Alexander and took place on the main villa lawn, followed by cocktail hour by the pool with guests sipping a Brisa del Mar – an intoxicating blend of tequila, lemon grass infusion, lemon juice, agave syrup and fresh basil and nibbling on teriyaki shrimp bao and fresh catch ceviche served on homemade tortilla chips as they were serenaded by a Mariachi band. Lotería cards –from a popular Mexican board game of chance – directed guests to their tables for dinner where they were greeted with a handcrafted Talavera tile place cards bearing their name. A two-course plated dinner was followed by dancing under the stars.

A casual pool party the next day was the perfect way to wrap up the festivities. Stories and photos were exchanged as guests helped themselves to a taco bar, swam, or simply soaked up the sun. A perfect piece of paradise to celebrate a marriage – literally – made in heaven.

A bride in a floral lace gown hugging a guest in a tan suit and straw hat during an evening outdoor wedding reception at Villa Santa Cruz.

Amanda’s Tops Tips for Planning a Dream Destination Wedding…

  1. Work with a wedding planner. Amanda calls this “the saving grace for us through all of the planning process.” She says a planner – like Meridith Lowe at Gemini Event Planning – has a specialized knowledge of what needs to happen, and when, to keep your vision on track and on time.
  2. Visit the location. Amanda says she’s “a little bit of a death by details type of person” but is still surprised when she hears about couples who haven’t visited the location prior to the big day. Visits make it possible to meet the on-ground team, troubleshoot, and create the perfect day.
  3. Choose your team well. Communication and trust are the two keys, Amanda says, when it comes to choosing your team of vendors. With a good team you can relax, “because at that final day, you just want to be able to be present and let go…”
  4. Plan, but don’t over plan. Yes, schedule lots of fun events for your guests but don’t over plan. Allow downtime for guests to rest, sit by the pool, or go shopping. They’ll thank you.
  5. Nurture connection. Amanda and Justin invited some of their best friends for a combined bachelor/bachelorette party prior to the big day. It’s an opportunity for old friends to reconnect and new friendships to form. “And it was really magical, because now they’re all so close,” she says.

The folks who made it all happen…

Wedding Planning
geminieventplanning.com

Catering, Venue & Lodging
villasantacruzbaja.com

Event Rentals
warehouserentals.mx

Linen Rentals
bbjlatavola.com

Florist
@florentamx

Ceremony & Reception Musician
garmanmusic.com

Mariachi
@soymexicocabo

Photographer
shanemacomberweddings.com

Content Creator
everaftercabo.com

Event Activation
cabofineentertainment.com

Hair & Makeup
gladystrevino.com

Stationer
kellykristindesign.com

Transportation
chekeluxurytravels.com

Wedding Gown
galialahav.com

Groom’s Wear
neimanmarcus.com

Groomsmen Wear
theblacktux.com

Jewelry
peyotebird.com

Story by Julia Platt Leonard

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Flying International for an Italian Wedding

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Bride Cristina Bartolacci in a lace Ines de Santo wedding gown and white sunglasses, lifting her veil during her wedding in Italy.

Two Pittsburghers living in New York City celebrated their big day in Italy. Christina Bartolacci and Philip Caputo shared their joy with family and friends, and the bride’s ancestral hometown.

Showcasing Love Italian Style at an International Wedding

As Pittsburgh transplants to New York City, Phil Caputo and Cristina Bartolacci felt fairly confident they knew the majority of people from their hometown who were also living there. It wasn’t until they were set up on a blind date that they finally crossed paths.

Bride Cristina Bartolacci and groom Philip Caputo leading their wedding guests down a stone staircase in the historic town of Colonnella, Italy.

A relationship bloomed from that first meeting at a wine bar in Tribeca. Two-and-a-half years later, Phil proposed near the apartment where Cristina lived after college while teaching English in Italy. Another surprise was just around the corner. Their parents were waiting at a nearby bar that also held special significance to Cristina from her time in Milan. “It was a real full-circle moment,” she says.

A close-up of a bride in a lace Ines de Santo wedding gown being helped into her dress by family members before her wedding.

For their spectacular wedding, the couple returned to Italy. This time it was to the Abruzzo region, where Cristina’s family has deep roots. As the bride’s father, Joseph Bartolacci shared in his reception toast, it was not just a destination wedding. They were “returning home.” It isn’t customary in Italy for the bride’s father to speak, and his emotional tribute to couple both turned heads and warmed hearts.

Bride Cristina Bartolacci and groom Philip Caputo during their wedding ceremony at Parrocchia di San Cipriano in Colonnella, Italy.

Cristina’s mother, Linda Bartolacci, collaborated with Joy Wedding Planner and the couple to plan this very special event. They infused every detail with care and love.

A black and white photo of Joseph Bartolacci, the bride's father, smiling in a suit and tie before the wedding ceremony.

In June of last year, they welcomed friends and family to Colonnella, Italy. “It’s a beach town, so people made it a vacation, which made it feel like we were all together for multiple days, rather than just one evening. We got to intimately spend a lot of time together,” says Cristina.

The festivities officially kicked off with a welcome party on the beach the night before the wedding.

The couple is the ninth generation in the bride’s family to marry at Parrocchia di San Cipriano. The ceremony blended Italian and English for their guests from near and far. Father Cristoforo Pujol, a friend of Cristina’s from grade school, officiated. Angel statues donated by her great-great-grandfather graced the altar. “There was a lot of history. So many generations before us had gotten married there, so it was really special,” she says.

A black and white photo of groom Philip Caputo smiling and holding a wine glass.

“In Italy, the tradition when you leave the church is for everyone to throw rice at you to wish you good luck. That was collectively one of our favorite moments. It’s also one of our favorite pictures from the entire day,” Cristina says. Residents also cheered their nuptials from surrounding the piazza and the balconies above.

Bride Cristina Bartolacci, wearing a high-neck lace wedding gown and pink sunglasses, cheers with an orange cocktail during her outdoor reception.

Afterwards, 160 guests gathered in the garden at Relais Villa Corallo, a recently restored 19th century villa situated between the ocean and the Italian countryside. It’s easy to see why Cristina instantly knew this was her dream location when first touring the property.

A sunset outdoor wedding reception in the garden of Relais Villa Corallo in Italy, featuring long tables with glittering chandeliers and floral centerpieces.

The garden’s inherent beauty set the tone for stunning celebration. A roaming saxophonist added jazz inflections to the evening’s music in a very Italian mix of jazz and pop. Long tables adorned with glittering chandeliers and pastel petals arranged by Faieta Fiori Lab welcomed everyone to the garden, along with a color-coordinated prosecco bar offering glasses of bubbles for a “first cin cin!”

Bride Cristina Bartolacci and groom Philip Caputo wave to their guests from a stone balcony of the historic Relais Villa Corallo.

Everything on the menu was locally sourced and highlighted traditional Abruzzese dishes. “A big cornerstone to our love story is food. Phil couldn’t do a lot of the translating and the planning, but it was really fun to see him pick all of the food,” says Cristina.

Bride Cristina Bartolacci and groom Philip Caputo cutting their mille-feuille wedding cake topped with candied strawberries.

There was spaghetti alla chittarra, thin egg noodles with tiny meatballs and red sauce (which the bride ate very carefully in her Ines di Santo wedding gown from Bridal Beginnings in Pittsburgh!) and late-night eats of arrosticini, a regional specialty of small lamb skewers. “We had about 20 of those each at 2 a.m.!” the bride recalls with a laugh. Their dreamy mille-feuille wedding cake featured cream custard and candied strawberries. Sumptuous pyramids of local figs completed the dessert offering.

Wedding guests sitting at a long dinner table under glowing crystal chandeliers during an outdoor reception in the garden of Relais Villa Corallo in Italy.

After the sun had set, Deb Jones Live Music brought the party to the outdoor dance floor. While a joyful dance party is a nearly universal part of American weddings, it’s a novelty in Italy. So much so that local media showed up the next morning to interview guests about the mix of Italians and Italian-Americans that had descended upon San Benedetto del Tronto.

Groom Philip Caputo in a linen shirt and tan trousers dancing with a guest in a light blue floral gown.

As for the bomboniere, or party favors, guests were gifted hand-painted thimbles featuring sunflowers (the bride’s favorite), made in nearby Castelli. They were thoughtfully chosen to honor the long history of master tailors and seamstresses both in the region and in their lineage, in particular, Cristina’s grandmother and grandfather. Bonus: the gifts easily fit in guests’ suitcases.

More than anything, the celebration “was so joyful,” says Linda. “You could feel Phil and Cristina’s love. That’s what made it so magical.”

Story by Nicole Barley
Photography by Krup Studio, Giacomo Vesprini and Marco Romandini

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11 of the Best Finds at Maison&Objet 2026 

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A brown chair sits in a dark color living room.

Home goods and design shows have proliferated globally over the years. And Paris is no different. The main attraction is Maison&Objet, which takes place twice a year on the outskirts of town, offering a mix of furniture, tabletop, textiles, rugs, home fragrance, and much more. This time around, there were over 2,300 exhibitors from more than 60 countries, and over 30,000 people attended. The designer of the year was Paris- and New York-based Harry Nuriev, who created a glimmering installation right in the middle of the goings-on.

There is also Maison&Objet in the City, an extension of the main show with events and exhibitions spread throughout town. Separately, there is also Déco Off, where storied fabric and wallcovering showrooms open their doors and show off the latest designs. This year, there was a new entry: the American entity Shoppe Object showed in Paris for the first time, offering a mix of goods to buyers and decorators from around the world.

11 Products and Designers to Look Out For From Maison&Objet 2026

Harry Nuriev Installation

Nuriev is the founder of Crosby Studios in New York and Paris, and this year’s Designer of the Year at Maison&Objet. His installation at the show was a large room that mixed eras and influences but unified everything with a shimmering silver finish. (Even the floor was silver—and you had to don shoe coverings to walk on it.) Nuriev is know for his concept of “Transformism” in design. “Today, the true challenge is not invention, but perception. It’s not a time for innovation—it’s a time for sensitivity, empathy, and honest response, rethinking and reshaping what we have already done,” he states.

Decorative Floor Vase “Love” / Кохання by Maryna Pupcha Part of Ukrainian Neo-Folklore

A genuine highlight at the show, this plush vase covered in sheep wool rugs combines motifs from Kosiv ceramics and traditional Ukrainian Easter eggs (pysanky) with vibrant wool textures. It is quite large (about 3.5’ tall) and epitomized the current trent of contemporary craft.

Senimo Clothes Rack / Room Divider

Long one of my favorite designers showing at Maison, Fabien Colomines’ work combines meticulous execution and wonderful use of color. While many of his previous pieces have been lacquered, he told me he wanted to do everything in house for this collection. He used a wire brush to open the natural grain of the ash wood before staining various shades from blond to black.

A white low sink below a silver faucet that water comes out of.
Photo Courtesy of Laufen

Volta by Yves Béhar for Laufen

A collaboration between with San Francisco-based designer Yves Béhar, the Volta basin combines an unusual shape that causes the water to flow in a gentle swirl. (Béhar is a surfer and drew inspiration from waves.) It is from a new material, Saphirkeramik, which is ultra thin and can form in highly precise ways.

Rose Rug by Moheban

Rugs often transform through color and pattern, sometimes augmented by plays on texture. Here, the Italian brand introduced this amorphous, round-ish example with wildly varying textures that combined weaving, clipped yarns, as well as other techniques. The unusual hues range from pale blue through reds/pinks/mauves and then to coffee.

A rug in light blue, dark blue, and brown.
Photo Courtesy of Yasima Fabrics

Yasima Fabrics

A collaboration between the Japanese textile company and Dutch tile designer Mae Engelgeer, inspired by Yasima’s archive, which goes back over 100 years. The innovative collection combines Kyoto-woven fabrics enhanced with Japanese lacquer, fusing tradition and also modernity. Patterns are (left to right) Charm, Grow, and also Dare.

Icône by Elitis

Shown during Déco Off, this alluring wall covering is a mix of raffie, linen, and wool, combined in a repeating pattern inspired by the Japanese concept of yūgen, which roughly translates as subtle grace or beauty, something not immediately obvious. The company calls it “a dialogue between emptiness and fullness through airy abstract patterns, faux plains with intricate textures and playful knots.”

Romaunt Collection by Martin Brudnizki for Samuel & Sons

Samuel & Sons held a masked ball during Paris Design Week, and encouraged attendees to make their mask in advance using this exquisite passamenterie, inspired by the Pre-Raphaelites. The collection spans cords, tassels, and fringes, in appropriately moody as well as dreamy colors.

Zephi and Otillo by Romo Group

Also part of Déco off, these two fabrics combine a Missoni-like used of contrasting color and pattern but somehow transform it into something earthier. Zephi (left) has cut pile in areas that create an éplinglé velvet pattern. Otillo (right) is a collection of decorative weaves and embroideries inspired by sun-soaked shores as well as Moroccan design.

A brown chair sits in a dark color living room.
Photo Courtesy of Rosemary Hallgarten

Country Manor Collection by Rosemary Hallgarten

Looking for a place that honored the past while looking towards the future to shoot her new collection, designer Rosemary Hallgarten chose a venue with the atmospheric title Ashby Manor. The pieces are done in warm in colors like cognac, camel, oxblood, and green, in fabrics and skins including silk, mohair, alpaca, and shearling.

Four stacks of mugs with three colorful mugs in each.
Photo Courtesy of SGW Lab

Mugs by SGW Lab

Part of Shoppe Object Paris, the UK-based ceramics studio showed a series of mugs with pinched bodies as well as trippy, drippy color combinations that ran the gamut from subtle to wild. They are inspired by William Morris and also the Arts and Crafts movement, seeing art as an expression of pleasure in human labor.

Story by Stephen Treffinger
Featured Photo Courtesy of Rosemary Hallgarten

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Spring Artichoke Recipes You’ll Want to Make All Season Long

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Crispy Artichokes with Lemony Bread Crumbs - a delicious savory dish with Western PA-based DeLallo Foods artichoke hearts

When markets start filling with artichokes, usually from March through May at their peak, you know the season has shifted to springtime. Fresh spring artichokes are more tender and flavorful than their fall season counterparts fall. Spring artichokes have tighter leaves, sweeter hearts, and a signature earthy, slightly nutty bite. They pair beautifully with olive oil, garlic, fresh herbs, Parmesan, and citrus, making them one of the most versatile vegetables of the season. These spring artichoke recipes celebrate them at their very best when they’re fresh, vibrant, and absolutely worth the little extra prep.

8 Spring Artichoke Recipes

Artichoke Dip

Top down view of a cookie sheet filled with various pieces of bread and pita triangles and a warm artichoke dip in the middle.

Starting off with a comforting classic, Artichoke Dip is a friend to crusty bread, tortilla chips, pita bread, and raw veggies. It’s creamy with savory roasted artichokes as well as a blend of cheeses that make it perfect for any party.

Stuffed Artichokes

Three stuffed artichokes in black bowls, with a garlic clove garnish and a sauce in the bottom of the bowl.

If you aren’t quite an artichoke lover then Stuffed Artichokes are an easy way to get into this vegetable. Large artichokes meet chorizo sausage, white wine, and plenty of seasoning before baking till crisp and golden brown.

Artichoke Puff Pastry Appetizer

A flat lay photo of several slices of a savory artichoke puff pastry tart, topped with sun-dried tomatoes, feta cheese, and parsley.

Grab a pack of puff pastry from your local grocery store and a jar of artichokes to make up an appetizer that will also appease all your friends and family. Simply lay out your puff pastry then get to work with sun-dried tomatoes, cherry tomatoes, feta cheese, basil olive oil, and the goodness of artichokes.

Lemon Artichoke and Triple Tomato Hummus Two Ways

A lemon artichoke hummus sits in a polka dot blue and white bowl on a white picnic table.

The Lemon Artichoke Hummus here reaffirms that homemade beats store-bought every time. As long as you have a food processor then you can break down chickpeas to mix with tahini, lemon olive oil, lemon zest, lemon juice, and preseved artichoke hearts.

Dandelion Artichoke Dip

A brown bowl full of Dandelion Artichoke Dip with a spoon in it and crusty bread laying around the dish.

Those who are looking to indulge in all of spring’s bounty will want to turn to the dandelion flower. The leafy green part of the dandelion also adds a little peppery taste to your usual artichoke dip. Don’t worry, there’s plenty of cheese too!

Baby Kale Salad with Citrus-Marinated Artichoke Hearts

Baby Kale Salad with Citrus-Marinated Artichoke Hearts and Lemon Vinaigrette on a white plate with a fork in the salad and a container of dressing to the left.

As we transition from the end of winter into spring, we can still take advantage of winter citrus like oranges, lemons, and limes, as well as fresh baby kale. You’ll even make your own dressing for this salad that’s lemony with hints of agave and spice.

Crispy Artichokes with Lemony Breadcrumbs

Crispy Artichokes with Lemony Bread Crumbs - a delicious savory dish with Western PA-based DeLallo Foods artichoke hearts

We’re letting the flavors and textures of roasted artichoke hearts shine with this recipe. A crunchy breadcrumb mixture of panko bread crumbs, butter, Parmesan cheese, lemon zest, as well as herbs coats each of these artichoke hearts. Just don’t forget the extra lemon slices for serving.

Goat Rodeo Grilled Cheese with Artichoke Pesto

A Goat Rodeo grilled cheese sandwich on a plate.

Artichokes can add a depth to any dish you combine them with. Here, we use artichoke hearts as a part of a pesto sauce with pepitas. Then, build a gourmet grilled cheese with sourdough bread, Goat Rodeo Wild Rosemary Cheese, fresh artichoke hearts, tomato slices, and your pesto.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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The Best Spring Break Party Destinations for Beaches and Booze

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A couple sits on a lifeguard stand as another couple stands beside it on the beach.

Spring Break does vacation a bit differently… preferably set somewhere with warm water, loud music, and a bar within reach of the shoreline. The best party destinations know how to blur the line between day drinking and nightlife, turning beaches into social hubs and sunsets into a pre-game for the night to come. If your ideal escape involves sunny bikini-weather afternoons, unapologetically strong cocktails, and nights that stretch into the next day, these Spring Break destinations deliver the kind of party chaos that’s very much by design.

Best Spring Break Destinations When You’re Ready to Party

Two girls dance on a DJ table as a crowd dances in front fo it.
Photo Courtesy of Greater Miami & Miami Beach

Miami, Florida

We know, we know. Miami sounds basic but it’s a great party destination for a reason. Head over to South Beach for clubs with vibrant light shows and killer DJs. But, Downtown is another place to adventure where you could even catch hip-hop performers or celebrity sightings. Even in Wynwood you can spend all night at clubs that play a little something for everyone.

A packed dance floor with steam coming down from the middle of the ceiling.
Photo Courtesy of Coco Bongo

Cancún, Mexico

If there’s one reason to go to Cancún, besides the magical blue waters and awe-inspiring resorts: the viral hot-spot Coco Bongo. Coco Bongo isn’t your average club. Yes, there is an extensive bar program and plenty of body-moving music. But, the club makes sure each night is also an all-out performance. You’ll see acrobats, dancers, and a team of actors who include the audience along the way. Though if this isn’t quite your vibe, there are plenty of more traditional clubs in Cancún too.

A DJ puts his hand up in the air as he plays for a large party.
Photo Courtesy of Amnesia

Ibiza, Spain

If there’s one person we can trust to show us a good time it’s Charli XCX. One of her personal favorites, and a club she chooses to DJ at, is actually in Ibiza. Amnesia is one of the most popular destinations in the city for its two large dance floors, special guests, as well as foam and bubble canons on select nights. Outside of this spot though Ibiza is also known for its boat parties. There’s nothing quite like bumping tunes on the water with your friends.

A group of girls sit on a netted boat on the blue water.
Photo Courtesy of Go Dominican Republic

Punta Cana, Dominican Republic

The white sands of Punta Cana are something everyone should see at least once in their life. This part of the Dominican Republic is all about taking you straight to the coastline for snorkeling, swimming with dolphins, ziplining, and so much more. The endless rows of beaches makes beach-hopping a breeze and many of the resorts in the area are customized for partying all night long. There’s also a Coco Bongo in Punta Cana so you won’t miss out on any of the crazy, theatrical fun.

A girl in a dress walks down the coastline with water coming up over the sand.
Photo Courtesy of Visit Greece

Mykonos, Greece

You think of Greece for its rich history and picturesque lands where Greek gods were thought to have roamed. But under the touristy parts of the Mykonos, especially in the downtown area, are endless basements full of world-renowned DJs. Here it’s normal for girls to be dancing up on the bars, clothing to feel optional, and the nights to extend long into the next morning. It’s considered to be the Ibiza of Greece.

A couple sits on a lifeguard stand as another couple stands beside it on the beach.
Photo Courtesy of Visit South Padre Island

South Padre Island, Texas

Texas has beaches? Actually, Texas has a whole island off the southern coast of state. This tropical island, South Padre, seems designed for college students when Spring Break comes around. The whole island is walkable, the scenery is like the more luxurious coasts but at a lower cost, and each year live artists make their way down to party with thousands of people. In case you’re looking for your all in one guide, Visit South Padre Island even runs a newsletter where you can sign up for exclusive offers and learn about all the latest happenings.

Unable to make it out to the coast this Spring Break? Create your own fun at home by mixing up our Adult Spring Break Spritz!

Story by Kylie Thomas
Featured Photo Courtesy of Visit South Padre Island

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Your March 2026 Horoscope for the Full Moon in Virgo and Lunar Eclipse

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A lunar eclipse moves over a full moon in the night sky, shining light out to the left side.

The Full Moon on March 3, 2026 falls in Virgo and coincides with a lunar eclipse, a condition that alters how fullness is experienced within horoscopes for the month. Unlike most Full Moons, which flood the sky with light, a lunar eclipse dims the Moon and casts a broad shadow. The effect can result in a single flash of revelation, but more commonly we find something diffused, like a gradual shift in one’s awareness. Attention moves toward what has been operating quietly, out of focus, or in the background, and the implications tend to unfold over an extended stretch of time, often across the following months.

The Lunar Eclipse’s Impact on Your Horoscope

Lunar eclipses have a way of loosening existing arrangements. Patterns that we ignored because they used to hold things together start to separate at the seams, and emotional responses are likely to be decided by the options you feel you have left. Activity may cluster close to the date itself, or it may disperse slowly, revealing consequences only as circumstances change. Either way, eclipses correspond with turning points whose significance becomes clearer through use, repetition, and experience – so don’t expect this full Moon to bring immediate resolution.

Virgo’s Hand in the Process

Virgo gives this eclipse a precise and grounded character. This is a sign concerned with discernment, craft, and the intelligent handling of material conditions. Virgo attends to maintenance, repair, and the quiet labor that keeps systems functional. Its intelligence is practical, investigative, and oriented toward improvement through careful adjustment. Emotional responses would benefit, then, by being filtered through observation and judgement, with an emphasis on what can be fixed, refined, or reorganized.

As an earth sign ruled by Mercury, Virgo connects thought directly to application. Decisions emerging under this eclipse often relate to work patterns and responsibilities, the routines in our lives that help or hurt our underlying state health (mental or physical), or the ‘everyday’. The symbolism will demand better discernment as the world addresses accumulated problems. The eclipse may not impact you directly, but you will certainly see themes around you that highlight where things have become inefficient, maybe even ineffective. This eclipse can help restore some balance through attentive, methodical effort rather than sweeping gestures.

Want to learn more about the zodiacal sign Virgo? It’s helpful to understand the ways the sign manifests if you hope to spot the influence of the Virgo lunar eclipse over the next six months (a lunar eclipse’s half-life, so to speak). See this article from astrologer Deborah Houlding on Skyscript, a site for astrologers, by astrologers. Plus, you can also read an article on how a March eclipse in 1987 (this one a solar eclipse in Aries) spelled disaster at sea, and how one astrologer attempted to warn the very company who would have to learn their lesson the hard way.  

All Eyes on Jupiter

One of the stabilizing features of this eclipse chart is the unusual emphasis placed on Jupiter. The Sun, Moon, and Mercury all move toward Jupiter by aspect, and several of the faster-moving planets gather in Pisces, a sign governed by Jupiter itself. That gives Jupiter an outsized role in shaping how this period behaves and how its pressures are processed.

In practical terms, Jupiter operates as ballast. Eclipses tend to unsettle familiar patterns, exposing strain or imbalance in systems that have been overloaded for some time. Jupiter does not remove that discomfort, necessarily, but it does provide a wider frame in which it can be understood and managed. Its influence supports repair through growth rather than contraction, offering perspective where things have begun to feel narrow, overburdened, or misaligned. Relief comes from making your world bigger, not refinement alone as an eclipse in Virgo might suggest if read in isolation. Adding space, experience, and range creates options that endless reorganization inside a tight container never can.

The Planet Alongside the Moon

The Moon’s supportive connection to Jupiter softens emotional responses without dulling them. Feelings still surface, but they should move more easily toward meaning and integration. There is a sense that reactions can be placed into a larger story, one that includes recovery, learning, and continuity. Emotional experience expands rather than tightening into reactivity.

The Sun’s trine with Jupiter reinforces this theme at the level of purpose and direction. Confidence returns through orientation rather than assertion. Decisions should feel easier to stand behind when they align with a broader sense of coherence, ethics, or long-term benefit. Growth ought to be framed as something earned through understanding, and it always comes with trade-offs. As the Sun perfects its trine to Jupiter, it effectively pulls Jupiter through the station and into direct motion. That shift is the price of admission: the trine delivers some lift, but it requires a pivot, including the backward-feeling phase that comes with planets changing direction. After the turn, movement is cleaner and purpose is easier to maintain.

Mercury’s in trine with Jupiter too, but comes with an important qualification. Although Mercury is in productive relationship with Jupiter, it’s moving retrograde, indicating that the developments it brings depends on review and correction. Conversations, plans, or interpretations from the recent past may need to be revisited in order to access Jupiter’s benefits fully. Insight grows through reworking language, assumptions, or agreements that previously missed the mark.

The Red Planet Mars Enters Pisces

Mars has just entered Pisces, and because this is the beginning of a sign, its presence is felt more strongly than usual. Mars is a planet that thrives on clarity of target and direct engagement. Pisces offers neither. Instead, it diffuses force into a fluid, emotionally saturated environment where motivations multiply and certainty dissolves. The result is not weakness, but misdirection. Drive remains intense, yet it moves through feeling, conscience, and impression rather than strategy or confrontation.

In Pisces, Mars still presses forward (how could it not?), but it does so through more indirect streams. Action is shaped by empathy, belief, and the surrounding emotional climate with this signature. Conflicts tend to arise through confusion, mixed signals, or misplaced loyalty rather than open challenge. Energy can surge suddenly, then ebb just as quickly, especially when inspiration fades or boundaries blur.

At its best, this placement channels courage into healing, protection, and creative effort. Mars becomes the surgeon rather than the soldier, willing to cut only where repair is possible. At its worst, frustration leaks sideways, stirred by exhaustion, avoidance, or the temptation to escape discomfort instead of meeting it cleanly. This is force moving through water: powerful, impressionable, and capable of reshaping its surroundings when guided with care. This signature will remain with us until mid-April.

Fixed Stars Zosma and Coxa

As the lunar eclipse passes over Zosma and Coxa in Leo, attention falls on a subtle but potent form of expression. These stars mark the hips and base of the Lion’s spine, the place from which thrust, movement, and force originate. In older traditions, this region was linked to prophetic utterances, words with power and meaning. Along the Euphrates, Zosma and Coxa were associated with the Oracle, suggesting speech that anticipates outcomes before they fully take shape.

With the Moon involved, words spoken during this period tend to carry emotional charge and memory. Joined to the South Node, the emphasis leans toward release, loss, or reckoning with what has already run its course. Statements may pass without immediate reaction, yet prove accurate as circumstances unfold over the following months. Tone can matter as much as content. Disparaging remarks, careless predictions, or fatalistic assumptions can echo longer than intended.

This symbolism calls for attentiveness rather than fear. Listen closely to what is said, especially in moments of fatigue or frustration. Choose language with care, and avoid lending momentum to narratives of decline. Speech moves an idea in our minds into outward direction, so it’s important to remember that words mean things. Even when what you have to say seems small, it can move events in quiet but lasting ways.

Seasonal Guidance: Mid-Winter Check-In for Your Zodiac Sign

Late winter is a threshold period. Cold still dominates, but moisture begins to accumulate, and the Earth prepares to release great potential in spring. This is a time for clearing so we can have a fresh start next season, easing congestion before momentum returns. Attention turns to circulation, digestion, and gradual reawakening. Heavy habits that kept you cozy earlier in winter are likely to feel burdensome soon. Small adjustments now help stir us out of a state of interia. Regular meals, consistent sleep, and gentle movement support the shift ahead. Think in terms of making room for spring rather than rushing to meet it.

Fire Signs (Aries, Leo, Sagittarius)

Maintain warmth while giving restless energy somewhere to go. Favor steady movement such as walking, light strength work, or stretching. Avoid pushing intensity too far, especially when sleep or meals slip. Keep food warm and nourishing, but simplify where possible. Short periods of activity followed by rest work better than long exertion. Social contact helps morale, though smaller gatherings remain easier to manage.

Earth Signs (Taurus, Virgo, Capricorn)

Keep routines intact, but soften rigidity. Introduce more movement into the day and reduce heaviness where it has accumulated, especially in food and workload. Warmth supports joints and digestion, while gentle stimulation prevents stagnation. Use this time to finish repairs, clear storage, and simplify systems. Space made now supports steadier momentum later.

Air Signs (Gemini, Libra, Aquarius)

Structure remains important as mental activity increases. Support circulation with regular movement that engages breath and coordination. Warm drinks and simple meals help focus. Limit excess screen time and scattered conversation. Choose fewer commitments and give them proper attention to keep energy from dispersing.

Water Signs (Cancer, Scorpio, Pisces)

Keep rhythms consistent while allowing gradual change. Warm foods and steady sleep remain important, but avoid excess heaviness. Movement supports emotional flow, especially walking or gentle stretching. Creative outlets and quiet connection help transition feeling into form. Avoid extremes of withdrawal or over-giving; steady engagement works best.

Sabian Symbol for 12° Virgo: A Powerful Statesman Overcomes a State of Political Hysteria

The Sabian image for this eclipse shows a figure who steadies a volatile situation through composure and authority. While only a handful of us hold public office, the symbol translates easily into everyday life. A “statesman” describes anyone able to bring perspective to an emotionally charged environment. Political hysteria, in this sense, points to group anxiety, rumor, or reactive thinking that spreads quickly and clouds judgement.

Applied practically, the image highlights the value of measured response when emotions run high. It favors calm leadership within families, workplaces, or communities, especially when fear or outrage begins to drive decisions. Authority is working in this image too, and appears – from the wording of the symbol – to come from within rather than from an external show of force. Words chosen carefully, timing observed, and restraint exercised can shift an entire dynamic. This symbol reminds us that influence often lies with the person who sets the pace, often slowing us down to restore some proportion, refusing to amplify collective agitation.

Learn more about the Sabian symbols here.

What Does the March 2026 Full Moon and Lunar Eclipse in Virgo Mean for Your Horoscope?

For some readers, this eclipse will coincide with personal turning points that feel unmistakable. For many more, its effects register indirectly — through shifts in workplaces, families, institutions, or the broader political and social climate. Eclipses tend to reveal where pressure has been building, whether experienced firsthand or observed at a distance. The clearest way to understand how this eclipse engages your own chart is through a consultation with a professional astrologer (I can be booked here: calendly.com/wadecaves/natal-consultation). What follows offers sign-by-sign themes and practical guidance for engaging thoughtfully with this period, whether it arrives close to home or plays out around you.

Aries

A lot of energy is pulling you outward toward friends, causes, or shared plans, but daily life still needs tending. Make sure work, health, and basic routines aren’t getting crowded out by other people’s priorities. Small fixes matter more than grand gestures, and a good place to check in is with diet and physical activity. Are you feeling content with these areas of your life? Notice where you’re overcommitting, and scale things back before frustration sets in. When your home base and schedule feel manageable, the eclipse’s hints at themes of collaboration become energizing instead of draining.

Taurus

Direct effort toward goals that actually matter to you, not just the ones that look impressive from the outside. Professional pressure can be energizing, sure, but progress depends on coordination rather than barreling through. Stay connected to allies, colleagues, and networks that share your longer-term aims. Conversations, planning, and learning play a practical role in moving things forward, so keep communication open and concrete. Ambition works best when it’s informed, collaborative, and paced. Steady movement, clear messaging, and realistic timelines help turn drive into results you can stand behind.

Gemini

Give some attention to how your work and your resources speak for you. Be clear about priorities, especially where responsibility and visibility overlap. Say what you mean in professional settings, and keep plans grounded in what you can reasonably support financially and practically. Ambition benefits from structure and building repeatable habits. Small adjustments to how you present ideas, manage time, or handle money can strengthen confidence and make progress feel more secure rather than rushed. Jupiter’s placement suggests you might want to check that effort is being matched with compensation or stability.

Cancer

Let curiosity lead you this season, but keep expectations realistic. Big ideas and new perspectives feel energizing, especially when they improve existing partnerships. Say what you mean simply, and listen for what’s underneath the exchange instead of rushing to conclusions. Writing, teaching, or short trips help sort feelings into something usable. Confidence grows through honest dialogue and follow-through, not grand statements. When learning stays connected to everyday life, insight turns into understanding that actually travels with you.

Leo

This eclipse will shake up how shared commitments affect your sense of security. Conversations with partners benefit from honesty about money, boundaries, and expectations, even if the topic feels charged. Strong emotions tend to surface around fairness and control, so keep exchanges focused on practical outcomes rather than winning a point. Review spending, shared funds, and obligations with care. New arrangements can be negotiated through clear agreements and follow-through on what you agree to. If you’ve been saving for a big financial goal, this period will test your resolve – hold firm, dear Leo!

Virgo

Pay attention to how much of yourself shows up in your closest relationships. It’s easy to default to cooperation or problem-solving, but your own needs and reactions deserve space too. Speak plainly about what you’re feeling, even if it feels slightly uncomfortable or unfinished. Conversations work best when they stay grounded and mutual. A good keyword is reciprocity; notice where you’ve been adjusting to keep things smooth, and where that’s starting to cost you energy. Balance requires shared participation – no one’s asking you to disappear into agreement.

Libra

Work is asking for consistency, but that doesn’t mean everything has to feel dutiful or flat. There’s room to enjoy what you’re doing, even on busy days, if you give pleasure a little structure instead of squeezing it in haphazardly. Creative energy and romantic interest want expression, but they work best when they don’t derail your schedule or commitments. Think about how you pace yourself. When enjoyment and responsibility support each other, progress feels satisfying rather than exhausting. Your ruling planet is pulling into better position in the coming weeks, so I expect this eclipse period will improve with time.

Scorpio

Creative work, romance, or time spent doing what you love benefits from a solid base at home – and that’s a good place to invest your time over the coming weeks and months. Pay attention to domestic tensions before they spill into other areas of life. Conversations about living arrangements, family roles, or emotional boundaries help clear space. Broader interests or long-range plans provide perspective, especially when daily life feels intense. Widening your outlook while keeping foundations steady should open new doors for you, giving pleasure and ambition somewhere to land.

Sagittarius

This eclipse is likely to drive your attention to where private obligations and public responsibilities intersect. Make room for conversations money you’re borrowing from others, your debts or support systems, especially where they touch family or long-term security. Step into professional roles with steadiness rather than bravado, and stay aware of how emotions shape visibility. Recognition comes more easily when foundations at home feel tended and agreements behind the scenes are clear. Aim for transparency and follow-through so ambition rests on something stable instead of pressure and intensity.

Capricorn

Learning, travel, or big-picture questions sit closer to the surface, especially those opportunities that are shaped through partnership one way or another. Other people act as mirrors for belief, purpose, and direction right now, which makes dialogue useful but also revealing (if you pay attention). Ideals need testing against reality before they’re taken too far. The full Moon on your 9th cusp incline toward something exploratory, and should strengthen ground shared with others, so long as it doesn’t pull away from long-term commitments.

Aquarius

Time to tap into your ruling planet Saturn and slow down enough to check in with what’s going on before acting on impulse. Look closely at what you’re spending time, money, and effort on, and whether it matches what you actually value. Physical activity helps work off pressure, especially when paired with a concrete goal – so stay active. Saturn is conjunct Neptune in this eclipse, so if an idea has been carrying more hope than structure, give it firmer edges before committing more energy. Progress will feel more stable when effort, resources, and intention are all aligned.

Pisces

Pay attention to how you’re presenting yourself and what you’re willing to step forward with. If something matters to you – a creative idea, a pleasure, a relationship – give it a bit more shape and follow-through instead of letting it drift. Showing up consistently does more than a burst of enthusiasm ever will. Notice how people respond when you commit openly (and you might watch for the inverse, too). Momentum will build when enjoyment is paired with effort, and when confidence shows up through what you actually do.

Horoscope Author

Wade Caves, based in Brooklyn, NY, is an astrological consultant and educator specializing in problem-solving applications of astrology. He teaches astrological divination and astronomy at the School of Traditional Astrology. Wade also publishes his work on world astrology through Skyscript’s In Mundo publishing desk. He even hosts the World Astrology Summit. A conference dedicated to the advancement of astrology for global problem-solving. Website: wadecaves.com • skyscript.co.uk/inmundo. Email: hello@wadecaves.com.

Story by Wade Caves
Photo Courtesy of Evan Leith

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8 Recipes for Your Mardi Gras Spread

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A gumbo enriched with ham and andouille sausage for a Creole-style feast.

When you think of Mardi Gras, also known as Fat Tuesday, you probably think of bright colors, parades, shiny beads around everyone’s necks, and plenty of comfort cooking. This Carnival celebration is an all-out, all-rich-foods celebration right before Ash Wednesday starts the fasting season of Lent. Join in the festivities this year and cook up a feast fit for royalty! You don’t have to be in New Orleans to enjoy the traditional dishes of Mardi Gras. From flaky, delicious desserts to hearty, flavorful, seafood dinner dishes, we’re sure this spread will leave your stomach so full you’ll be happy the fasting season has arrived the next morning. 

Celebrate Mardi Gras with These New Orleans Recipes

King Cake

A braided bread with berries and other seasonings inside it, surrounded by small blue plates and various ingredients.

The King Cake is a tradition for Mardi Gras and the holiday of Epiphany (Three Kings Day) on January 6. This combination coffee cake and cinnamon roll is sweet and delicious with a baby hidden inside to represent baby Jesus. Whoever gets the slice with the figure wins a prize. We recommend decorating your king cake with the purple, yellow, and green frosting or sprinkles to really get into the Mardi Gras spirit. 

Jambalaya

Jambalaya in a bowl placed on a ceramic surface along with a spoon, spices, and lemon

What says New Orleans more than a big bowl of Jambalaya? It’s warm, spicy, and made from the heart. Our recipe piles the protein high with chicken, shrimp, and smoked sausage mixed into rice, celery, onion, green pepper, and a savory broth. It’s a recipe that reminds you there’s nothing quite like homemade cooking.

Green Gumbo

A gumbo enriched with ham and andouille sausage for a Creole-style feast.

Fat Tuesday is right before Lent so feel free to load up your gumbo with ham, andouille sausage, slab bacon, or all three! Our Green Gumbo starts with a rich stock of smoked ham hock or slab bacon, bay leaves, black peppercorn, and allspice berries. Then we add in your choice of protein, onion, celery heart, bell pepper, kale, collard greens, and so much more to make this a fulfilling dish for your celebration. 

Braised Beef Short Ribs with Cheddar Cheese Grits

Tender braised beef atop cheesy grits.

Grits are another staple of Louisiana, especially when they’re cheesy! In this recipe, we pair them with a Braised Beef Short Ribs recipe whose results are so tender, the meat falls off the bone. A perfect accompaniment to creamy Cheddar Cheese Grits. It’s truly a comfort dish at its finest level that’ll make you feel like you’re at a cafe on the streets of New Orleans. 

Turmeric Lemon Beignets

Powdered sugar topped beignets sit in a black bowl while a plate of beignets sits unfocused in the back.

Who would we be if we didn’t include beignets in our Mardi Gras menu? This recipe combines the vibrant flavors of turmeric and lemon to create a unique and unforgettable treat. These fluffy, golden squares of fried dough are not only delightful in their cloud-like texture but in their punch of flavor as well.

Zesty Shrimp Roll

A plate of mini shrimp sandwiches.

If you’re looking for a smaller bite that still incorporates essentials like shrimp and a little bit of spice, our Zesty Shrimp Rolls are your perfect appetizer. Grab your favorite bun and stuff it up with shrimp, celery, carrots, and fennel, then coat in a zesty, tangy sauce of mayonnaise, sour cream, chili flakes, lime, and lemon. So simple to make and just as easy to enjoy.

Wintertime Rice and Beans

Wintertime Rice and Beans served in a steel bowl

Every feast needs a side that matches its excellency. For Mardi Gras, that means red beans and rice which give you a cushion for spicy gumbo and other dishes. Our Wintertime Rice and Beans uses white rice, adzuki beans, black beans, Vindaloo curry spice, and a pinch of saffron for something a little more flavorful than your average recipe.

Oyster Shooter

A look in photo of an etched shooter glass with an oyster on the half shell resting on the top of the glass on a black surface, with another oyster shooter in the background along with a dish of oysters.

What better way is there to end a Mardi Gras dinner than with an Oyster Shooter? This combination of deliciously salty oyster with a rich Bloody Mary shot is simple decadence. We welcome you to dress up your oyster as well though our Bloody Mary mix uses horseradish Worcestershire sauce, hot sauce, and fresh ground black pepper.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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Famous Boston and Seattle Foods to Prep for Super Bowl LX

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A plate of mini shrimp sandwiches.

With Super Bowl LX set to pit the Seattle Seahawks against the New England Patriots on one of the biggest stages in sports, fans are already just as excited about what’s on the party menu as what’s on the scoreboard. Boston’s rich seafood traditions and classic comforts as well as Seattle’s bold Pacific Northwest flavors offer delicious, local pride that connects you deeper to the team you love. Whether you’re planning your game-day spread or just craving regional inspiration, take a look at the cities behind these teams with a spread for each.

Fill Your Super Bowl LX Sunday with Famous Boston and Seattle Foods

For New England Patriots Fans

Roasted Oysters with Cornbread, Leek and Banana Pepper Crumble

7 roasted oyster with corn and herb garnish on a blue plate and 2 oyster shells and a beer sitting on a dark colored surface. seafood dishes

It’s no surprise that oysters are one of the prime foods of this seafood town. If you’re making oysters at home, we have a way to shake things up besides mignonette sauce. These Roasted Oysters contain a cornbread, leek, and banana pepper crumble that expands the oyster flavor you know and love.

Sheet Pan Roasted Shrimp, Clams, Asparagus & Leeks

Roasted Shrimp, Clams, Asparagus and Leeks on a sheet pan, garnished with lemon wedges. Sheet Pan Roasted Shrimp, Clams, Asparagus and Leeks Recipe

There’s a little something for everyone in this sheet pan seafood mix. We’re featuring tasty clams, shrimp, asparagus, and leeks all in a savory white wine butter. Super simple, this dinner doesn’t take much prep leaving you with a delicious product easily.

Cod & Potato Chowder with Coconut Milk, Lime & Cilantro

A Cod & Potato Chowder with bright splashes of lime and a creamy coconut milk base.

We know clam chowder is the usual soup in Boston but we’re incorporating cod instead. This chowder warms the winter chill with chunks of potato in a creamy and tangy coconut milk broth. Plus there are jalapeños that add just the right amount of spice.

Zesty Shrimp Rolls

A plate of mini shrimp sandwiches.

Quality lobster is hard to come across if you don’t live on the coast so we’re utilizing shrimp instead to create a roll with the same great flavor. These Zesty Shrimp Rolls use a coating that’s light but full of citrus and a punch of heat. It all comes together for a bite that’s well-rounded in taste and texture.

Reuben Salad with Grilled Cheese Croutons

Reuben salad with sliced meat on top and a drizzle of thousand island dressing.

Boston is Irish to its core with a large population of its citizens loving corned beef, Irish soda bread, and Guinness. Our Reuben Salad is the beloved sandwich in a healthier form. But don’t be fooled, it’s just as delicious with grilled cheese croutons, corned beef, and a homemade thousand island dressing.

For Seattle Seahawks Fans

Bruschetta with Crushed Peas and Smoked Salmon

A white plate holds a pea puree bruschetta with smoked salmon on top as a green plate off to the side holds a small bowl of the pea purree.

In case you’re looking for an appetizer bite with Seattle flair, a smoked salmon topping along with fresh crushed peas makes for a decadent bruschetta. There’s notes of dill, lemon, and olive oil layered here that make this finger-food feel elegant all the way throughout.

Teriyaki-Glazed Grilled Octopus

Octopus Braised in a Symphony of Flavors with Sticky Rice, Wasabi Emulsion, Teriyaki Glaze, and Yuzu Aioli

Did you know teriyaki is wildly popular in Seattle thanks to Toshihiro Kasahara who also started the trend in the 70’s. Our version of teriyaki includes using it as a glaze for perfectly-grilled octopus. It’s rich and acidic but plenty delicious with yuzu and a bit of wasabi.

Salmon Tartare and Salmon Grilled Cheese

On a white plate to the left sits Salmon Tartare in the shape of a goldfish. To the right sits Salmon Grilled Cheese.

Here we give you two choices for featuring one of Seattle’s most prosperous ingredients, salmon. You could choose to make a Salmon Tartare on its own featuring a white soy dressing and avocado purée. Or, you could choose to make a grilled cheese sandwich that stuffs it full of cold-smoked salmon, pickled onions, and horseradish vinaigrette.

Three Delicious Condiments for Hot Dogs and Beyond

Three small bowls of condiments sit on a white picnic table with spoons and hot dog buns spread across the table too.

Hot dogs are something special in Seattle. Some call it a Seattle Dog, some call it a Bagel Dog but the important part is the bun is slathered in cream cheese. Sometimes you’ll also see other topping like caramelized onions. But, we have our own topping for hot dogs. Fire-roasted Jalapeño Ketchup, Cilantro Aioli, and Pineapple Salsa are all amazing drizzled atop a dog but we wouldn’t blame you if you added cream cheese too.

Blueberry Dutch Baby

A dutch baby with blueberries sits in a cast iron pan with a slice on a plate next to it.

The Dutch Baby, a German pancake-like dish actually comes from Seattle thanks to Manca’s Cafe in the 1900’s. This particular recipe uses blueberries to blend with the sweetness like the powdered sugar and honey on top. It’s kind of like a dessert, kind of like breakfast, and absolutely devour-able.

Continue prepping for the Super Bowl with a Seattle Seahawks and a New England Patriots cocktail in our ultimate guide.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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