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Save Your Dollars in 2026 with These Easy Canned Fish Recipes

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Panelle, Hand-Dipped Ricotta, and Anchovies. Accompanied by the Indigenous Red Varietal, Caruso e Minini Terre Siciliane Perricone Naturalmente Bio from Tina’s Bottle Shop.

Canned fish… tinned fish… whatever you call it, it’s trending, and for good reason. Delicate filets of herring, tuna, sardines, anchovies, and more seem to last forever when you preserve them in a salty brine. This also makes them lasting on the shelves of grocery stores and helps keep their prices low in this age of tariffs. Our recipes below provide you with inexpensive but flavorful meal ideas that stretch these fish further than just straight out of the tin. Lunch and dinner have never been so easy.

Easy Canned Fish Recipes

Pickled Herring

Pickled herring plated on a blue backdrop with spiced garnishes.

Canned herring is naturally salty and a rich marinade preserves them in their packaging. Rather than eating them straight from the container, upgrade them by pickling in vinegar with mustard seed, allspice, cloves, bay leaves, and a bit of sugar.

Fried Sardines (Sarde in Saor)

A tantalizing Sarde in Saor dish, featuring tinned sardines marinated in a sweet-and-sour blend of raisins, onions, and white wine vinegar

If the slippery texture of sardines turns you off, maybe frying them will change your mind. A mixture of crispy sardines, onions, vinegar, and raisins slathers onto a slice of barley sourdough. Finish it all with pine nuts and parsley for an elegant bite.

Panelle (Sicilian Chickpea Fritters) with Ricotta and Anchovies

Panelle, Hand-Dipped Ricotta, and Anchovies. Accompanied by the Indigenous Red Varietal, Caruso e Minini Terre Siciliane Perricone Naturalmente Bio from Tina’s Bottle Shop.

Anchovies are for more than just on pizza. By creating a panelle chickpea fritter from scratch, you get a base that you can dress up with a variety of flavors. Think ricotta cheese with za’atar seasoning, lemon juice, and anchovy fillets.

Lemon Spaghettini with Olives and Anchovies

a full plate of Lemon Spaghettini with Olives and Anchovies lying on a table

Since pasta is another ingredient that’s sure to stay reasonably priced this year, at least if it’s domestically produced, combine it with affordable canned anchovies. A light lemon olive oil drizzles over a dish of black olives, anchovy fillets, carrots, capers, and a variety of spices.

White Bean Tuna Salad Wraps

White Bean Tuna Salad Wraps sit on a green plate with two orange slices, and a few pieces of kiwi.

There is something so nostalgic about tuna salad that even when it’s just between two pieces of bread it’s delicious. Bulk up your usual recipe with the addition of chopped red onion, lemon juice, white beans, arugula, and spring salad mix.

Bigoli in Salsa

A plate of whole-wheat spaghetti (bigoli in salsa) on a striped placemat.

Another way of combining pasta and canned fish is in our Bigoli in Salsa recipe which features sardines or anchovies and a white wine sauce. Using whole-wheat spaghetti adds another healthy element, showing that taking care of yourself can be accessible too.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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8 Chicken Recipes to Help Keep Dinner Affordable in 2026

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A chicken fajita skillet with slices chicken, limes, and peppers. Then there are small bowls of pico, sour cream, and onions.

Buying protein at the grocery store in 2026 can be terrifying. You never know how high beef prices will be or what will even be available. But, chicken is always there as an affordable protein that’s readily available any time of year. Not to mention, you can usually stretch a whole roast chicken into multiple meals. The recipes below remind you the versatility of chicken for dinner to help make shopping at a low-cost, easy. No more breaking the bank just to enjoy the taste of something delicious.

8 Affordable Chicken Dinner Recipes

Roasted Chicken with Vegetables

A perfectly roasted whole chicken on a white platter garnished with grapes, apples, cranberries, and fresh sage, alongside a vintage carving set.

You can’t go wrong with a roasting chicken that’s big enough to feed the whole family. Juicy and succulent, this recipe prepares the chicken with fresh garlic, onion, lemon, and bunches of herbs. Throw in tender potatoes and carrots for a traditional dinner.

Creamy Chipotle Chicken Enchilada Skillet

Creamy enchilada with limes and garnishes in a skillet

A one pan skillet recipe means that you can prepare everything in one go. Think of this as a deconstructed enchilada with a savory mix of chicken, green chile peppers, and enchilada sauce all under layers tortillas, cheese, avocado, and slices of lime.

Vietnamese-Style Chicken Wings

An above shot of a baking sheet filled with Vietnamese Chicken Wings.

When chicken wings are restaurants are too expensive for eating out, making them at home offers a solution. Marinating these wings in lime juice, fish sauce, brown sugar, garlic, ginger, and lemongrass means a crispy product. Try serving your them with a Thai pepper dipping sauce.

Martha Stewart-Inspired Keto Chicken Roll Ups

A cast iron pan on a picnic table with chicken roll ups sitting in a creamy sauce with two small containers of salt and pepper below.

Keto on a budget. Martha Stewart was our inspiration for these diet-friendly Chicken Roll Ups. Spinach and mozzarella pillow inside chicken breasts wrapped in pieces of prosciutto. Each sits in a lemon artichoke cream sauce that’s made with herbed Boursin cheese.

Farm Chicken and Wild Rice Soup

A chicken wild rice soup dish on a white background.

Crafting a filling soup leaves you with leftovers to supplement your meals the whole week long. Rather than stick to your usual chicken noodle, try a chicken and wild rice soup that packs the bowl full of veggies. You’ll even make your own broth from scratch so you’re sure to use the entirety of your roasted chicken.

Chicken Fajita Skillet

A chicken fajita skillet with slices chicken, limes, and peppers. Then there are small bowls of pico, sour cream, and onions.

The best part about fajitas is being able to dress them up however you please. Let us take the ropes to help you create a scrumptious pan full of fajita chicken with peppers and onions. Then, let your imagination run wild with your topping such as pico, lime wedges, sour cream, avocado, queso fresco, and much more.

Martha Stewart-Inspired Chicken Pot Pie

A portion of Martha Stewart-Inspired Chicken Pot Pie sits on a pale green and white plate with a fork and knife beneath it and a piece of focaccia in the bottom right corner.

As the year of 2026 increases price points, absolve your stress with a comfort meal. Our Martha Stewart-Inspired Chicken Pot Pie is the best of both worlds as it’s affordable to make and nostalgic too. A crispy crust breaks open to reveal a warm filling of chicken, peas, carrots, and onion.

Chicken and Waffles

Southern fried chicken and waffles on bright yellow plates, drizzled with hot honey butter sauce, alongside a wooden cutting board with plain waffles.

Craving breakfast for dinner? Chicken and Waffles is the answer. Learn how to make Southern fried chicken strips that use buttermilk, chili powder, paprika, and a seasoned flour for a decedent taste. The honey butter sauce mends the bridge between these two worlds of savory and sweet.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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2026 Food Trends: High Quality Protein and Analog Dining

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A chunk of marbled meat on a dark marble table with coarse salt all over the table.

Is the sizzle of a fantastic steak or the crackling crust of a well-roasted duck a satisfying antidote to much screen time? The answer for 2026 appears to be yes! As Americans seek balance in an increasingly digital world, high quality meats and analog dining rituals are becoming a prominent part of the broader analog trend. 

The Rise of Analog Experiences in a Digital World 

After more than a decade of rapid increases in daily screen time, Americans are showing signs of digital boredom. Screen time is gently tapering off, and analog amusements are stepping in. Vinyl record sales are up 18% for each of the last five years, with Gen Z leading the way. They embrace vinyl for the warmth and depth of old school recording and methods and home stereo equipment. Cassettes and DVDs are showing signs of revival, too.  

35mm film and Polaroid photography are also on the rise, with both professionals and amateurs seeking more less predictable and “precise” ways of recording life and creating art. Expression and emotion are what matters most here, not mere accuracy.  

Analog Dining and Dinner Parties Make a Comeback 

The analog movement has found strength in the food world as well. Dinner parties are on the rise, thanks to the need to slow down and connect offline. 

 Pinterest and Instagram searches for dinner party dining rose 160% from 2024 to 2025, with continued strength across the last 12 months. The appeal here lies in making emotional connections with friends, family members, and associates…and in the sensual, tactile rituals of preparing, serving, and eating food.  

Creative table settings, thoughtful choices of food and music, and hand-picked guest lists, help to create unique and memorable moments to share with others. 

While vegan- and vegetarian-friendly vegetable-based dishes, sharable salads, and easy-peasy crostini are important in the foods served at today’s dinner parties, high quality proteins also have a major presence. Digital trend watcher charm.io observes a 57% increase YOY in TikTokShop revenue around the keyword protein and 150% increase in views. Among the prime ingredients: beef, tinned fish, duck, and pork. 

These premium animal proteins are not just ingredients. They are part of a larger shift in how consumers think about food quality, pleasure, and sustainability. 

A black pig stands in a forest of weeds.

Consumers Choose Fewer, Better Ingredients 

“Consumers in 2026 are rediscovering pleasure and pragmatism in food,” says Gabriel Llaurado, co-founder of Meat N’ Bone, a Miami-based premium butcher known for its high quality meats. “Tinned fish has gone from niche to weeknight luxury — it’s wellness, convenience, and indulgence in one tin. At home, people are reaching for fewer, better ingredients: local beef, Wagyu blends, and regenerative proteins continue to thrive because shoppers aren’t eating less meat — they’re eating smarter, trading up for quality.” 

Llaurado continues: “We’re also watching the great plant-based reset: consumers are moving away from overly engineered substitutes and embracing honest, whole-food simplicity. People want satiety, clean ingredients, and portion-controlled satisfaction. It’s not about restriction anymore, it’s about feeling good and eating well. Even as AI reshapes industries, one thing it can’t replicate is the sensory and emotional depth of cooking or dining together. The sound of a steak hitting the grill, the aroma of rendered fat, the warmth of sharing food — those are timeless human experiences, and that’s exactly where food culture is heading: back to connection, back to authenticity.” 

High-Quality Beef: A Star of Home Cooking 

High quality beef is a standout withing the premium protein category. 

Maxine Sharf’s soon-to-be-released cookbook, Maxi’s Kitchen: Easy Go-To Recipes to Make Again and Again, publishes in early March 2026. In the book, Sharf showcases 95 approachable recipes inspired by her multicultural heritage, many of them embracing high quality proteins.

“I think there’s been a real shift toward people caring more about the quality and sourcing of their food, especially animal proteins. There’s also less fear around fat now, with more people understanding that healthy fats have a place in a balanced diet. I’ve definitely seen more interest in high-quality beef recipes. One of my favorites is a steak chimichurri bowl from my cookbook. I make it with medium rare skirt steak sliced thin over rice, topped with a vibrant chimichurri sauce and quick pickled onions for a pop of acidity. It’s such a satisfying way to enjoy a great cut of meat,” Sharf notes, highlighting exactly the kind of simple, analog pleasure that defines 2026 food trends. 

A man holds three small chicks in his hands.

Duck Takes Flight as a High-Quality Meat for Home Cooks! 

Duck is another high-quality eat seeing a major rise in popularity. 

John-Paul Bulow, co-founder of Santa Fe-based Beck and Bulow, purveyor of a wide variety of top quality meats, seafood, and charcuterie, saw an important embrace of quality proteins during the 2025 holiday season. “We noticed during our Thanksgiving sales period that customers opted for higher end meats over turkeys,” he commented. “Beef in general, was in the lead in the form of prime rib, wagyu, and beef/ bison tenderloins. Duck has definitely been part of a strong holiday season last year, as well.”  

Food industry observer Garrett Allen asserts that the trend of people cooking at home is expected to continue, based on various food industry sources including Meat & Poultry. “This will lead,” he says, “to consumers being more experimental in meal preparation and planning as they look to recreate the excitement of going out to eat. As an example, duck meat, once a seasonal special at white linen tablecloth restaurants, has transitioned to a regular menu item. Duck meat producers are also creating products geared toward home chefs that are easy to prepare. Fully cooked offerings like a roasted half duck, duck carnitas, duck sausage, or other options like a duck pot pie enable home cooks to create a restaurant quality experience at home that will impress families and friends and leave them asking for more.” 

Duck in Everyday Grocery Stores and Home Kitchens 

We’ve observed signs of the rise of duck in the Pittsburgh area. Aldi grocery stores have been offering frozen whole ducks for under $20.  Eastern PA-based Joe Jurgielewicz & Son, long respected for their farm-raised duck, offer their products at Strip District Meats. Praised by athletes for its coverage of all essential amino acids and high iron content, duck looks ready, if you’ll forgive the expression, to soar.  

If you’re intrigued with the flavor possibilities, Try one of TABLE Magazine’s delicious duck recipes:  

Muscovy Duck Breast with Blackberry Glaze, Sweet Potato, & Fennel
Slices of duck breast sit on a white plate surrounded by greens and a blackberry sauce.
Braised Duck Leg in Green Chile with Cumin-Infused Roasted Carrots
Plated braised duck leg in green chiles and roasted cumin carrot strips topped with parsley.
Mushroom Ragout Over Garlic Crostini With Spiced Duck
An aerial shot of Mushroom Ragout Over Garlic Crostini With Spiced Duck
Crispy Duck Leg Confit
Duck legs arranged in a line with various sauces

Maxine Sharf is also a duck fan. “Peking duck is one of my all-time favorite Chinese dishes. The duck is roasted until the skin is perfectly crispy, and it’s served with thin pancakes or sometimes soft white buns, along with sliced green onions and hoisin sauce. It’s a meal that feels celebratory and special. In my family, it’s something we usually go out for rather than make at home.”  

American Quail or Iberico Pork: Emerging High-Quality Meats 

Another new candidate in the high-quality protein category is quail. Manchester Farms, the oldest and largest quail farm in the United States, has seen a huge rise in demand for both quail meat and eggs. Like duck, quail is a popular protein for fine dining chefs that is now starting to gain more popularity with home cooks. To be honest, we have not yet explored quail at TABLE, but a handful of quail recipes on the Epicurious site have us feeling quail-curious! 

Iberico Pork, the “Wagyu of Pork” 

A few clever influencers moved Iberico pork closer to the center of foodie conversations in the United States last year. Free-range, acorn-fed animals produce fat-marbled meat with notable flavor and texture. Said to be the wagyu of pork, Iberico seems to be following the same path as top quality beef: it’s an indulgence worth splurging on once in a while. Campo Grande, a notable online purveyor of Iberico pork, offers a free cookbook with qualifying purchases. It’s worth checking out.  

Dining at Home in 2026: High-Quality Meats Meet Analog Rituals 

As we move into 2026, high quality meats are emerging as a defining expression of the analog trend: slower, more tactile, and deeply rooted in shared experience. From Wagyu beef and tinned fish to duck, quail, and Iberico pork, consumers are choosing fewer, better ingredients that deliver both flavor and emotional satisfaction. Home cooks are entertaining more, experimenting more, and caring more about provenance, technique, and ritual. In a culture saturated with screens and algorithms, the simple act of gathering around a table to savor a thoughtfully cooked piece of meat feels not just nostalgic, but necessary. 

High quality meats and premium proteins are no longer reserved for restaurants. They are becoming a major part of home cooking and dinner party culture. For anyone watching 2026 food trends, one message is clear: the future of home dining is meaty and deliciously analog. 

Story by Keith Recker

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Food as Medicine: Extra Virgin Olive Oil and GLP-1

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A bottle of olive oil sits on a table with olives around it.

Science has discovered yet another benefit stemming from the goddess Athena’s gift to Greece, the olive tree. The eponymous fruit has nourished humans for many thousands of years — and is now part of the conversation on weight loss. Why? Olive oil is a natural source of polyphenols, which encourage our bodies to increase GLP-1 secretion, no injection needed.  

How Extra Virgin Olive Oil and GLP-1 Can Benefit Your Health

“GLP-1 is a naturally occurring hormone that activates in response to the food that we eat,” says Nasser Abufarha, founder and director of Canaan Palestine, a mission-based business and olive oil producer headquartered in Jenin, Palestine. “With more GLP-1 in your system you’ll feel full for longer, have improved glucose tolerance, have an increase in cardiovascular health, and your digestive process will slow so your body can absorb more of the vitamins and nutrients you ingest.” 

A bin full of green and black olives.
Photo Courtesy of Melina Kiefer

Where to Source High-Quality Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Adding a few tablespoons of extra-virgin olive oil a day can enhance overall wellness, the key is to source high-quality varieties — and we’ve done the groundwork for you:  

Frankies 457 Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Frankies 457 Extra Virgin Olive Oil is fruity, nutty, deep, and bright. and made with olives grown and harvested on Frankie’s Farm in Sicily, which is owned and run by Brooklyn-born chefs Frank Falcinelli and Frank Castronovo. Look for 457 EVOO at frankies457.com, Whole Foods, or at F&F Pizzeria in Mt. Lebanon, where the two Franks celebrate all that’s Italia.  

Liokareas

Named for the forefather who in 1850 acquired an olive orchard in Kalamata, Greece, Liokareas takes their polyphenols — specifically oleocanthal — seriously, offering their RX High Phenolic Extra Virigin Olive Oil. With just one tablespoon of the RX oil per day, reports the Pittsburgh-based purveyor, the strong presence of oleocanthal, a powerful anti-inflammatory, will “combat disease and promote longevity.” Indeed, it was cited as the World’s Healthiest Olive Oil five years in a row at the Oleocanthal International Society’s “World’s Best Healthy EVOO Contest.”   

Mediterra Bakehouse

Mediterra Bakehouse, the artisan bread bakery that opened in 2002, operates three cafes in Sewickley, Mt. Lebanon, and Lawrenceville. The lively spots offer a broad menu of breakfasts, baked goods, sandwiches, specialty boards and bowls, as well as a curated mercantile stocked with vinegars, cheeses, pastas — and olive oils. While the oil offerings lean heavily into Greek sources, which is fitting with the Ambeliotis’s family heritage, they also feature polyphenol-heavy Italian oils pressed from Crudo (with notes of almonds and artichokes) and Nocellarra (nutty, fruity, and rich) olives. These early-harvest oils, pressed from the first culling of olives, are rich in natural polyphenols.  

Canaan Palestine

The roster of seven Canaan Palestine oils are born from olive trees that are more than 1,000 years old. Nasser Abufarha, who earned his doctorate at the University of Wisconsin, wove regenerative agriculture techniques and high-quality production to “ensure each bottle is bursting with flavor and beneficial compounds that naturally support GLP-1 production.” Their Rumi Olive Oil from Surri olive trees — a tree indigenous to Palestine — is their most complex offering with a fruit-forward taste that turns tangy and bitter before finishing on a spicy, peppery note.  

The History of Olives

Olives, of course, have a deep history, playing a major role in the culture of some of the earliest civilizations, including Greece, Egypt, Phoenicia, and Rome. Resilient and able to flourish in a multitude of challenging conditions, the olive tree lent its fruit to these ancient cultures for food, religious rituals, lamp fuel, and use in cosmetics.  

Early on, olive oil was also embraced for its health-promoting virtues, with the first mention of its medicinal qualities in the Ebers Papryus, an Egyptian medical text from 1550 B.C.  Hippocrates, the Grecian father of medicine, called olive oil “the great healer.”  

Cultivation of the olive tree expanded dramatically along with the Roman Empire, and again much later when a network of maritime commerce gradually encompassed the globe starting in the late 15th century. The earliest record of the olive arriving to the U.S. with the Franciscan missionaries in the late 1700s, San Diego, where they planted olive groves. Commercial olive oil production was running in California by the late 19th century.  

But olive oil didn’t significantly expand its reach into American supermarkets until the early 1980s. Prior to that, it was available mainly at specialty and ethnic grocers. While not a huge hit with many consumers, perhaps due to extra virgin olive oil’s robust flavor notes, it went over well at restaurants.  

Hills of olive vines in a countryside.
Photo Courtesy of Jonah Townsley

How is Olive Oil Healthy?

In 1981 The New York Times published an article highlighting research purporting the health benefits of monounsaturated fat. This was a big deal for the olive oil industry, which had suffered when, in the 1960’s, many U.S. doctors and the food industry demonized fats as artery-clogging and weight gain-inducing. Americans were encouraged to replace fatty foods with low-fat alternatives. Not surprisingly, rates of obesity began to rise when a diet with moderate fat consumption was replaced with one focused on simple carbohydrates and sugar. (Other factors contributed, such as the rise of processed foods and more sedentary lifestyles.) 

Subsequent studies differentiated between saturated fats and unsaturated fats, pointing out that monounsaturated fats are very beneficial to human health, citing populations who rely heavily on extra virgin olive oil as part of their diet as having far less cardiovascular disease. (Here’s looking at you, Mediterranean cultures.) 

The Problem

But the food industry was — and still is — a marketing powerhouse with a history of encouraging the consumption of processed simple carbohydrates and sugary convenience foods. These tempting options proved to hard habits to break, and many Americans did not embrace the health benefits of a diet of whole foods and unsaturated fats.  

As a result, we are in an epidemic of chronic disease. Over-consumption of the Standard American Diet (SAD) is a significant player in the cycle of obesity, lack of mobility, and destruction of a healthy gut biome.

As the U.S. tries to dig out of a constant state of poor health, there is growing awareness — and availability — of health-supportive foods, such as olive oil.  

And while curing an epidemic, or revolutionizing one’s entire way of eating, might seem overwhelming, small changes can make a significant difference, such as adding 2-3 tablespoons of high-quality extra virgin olive oil to our plates per day.  

The Solution

For those ready for a bigger step, High Phenolic Extra Virgin Olive Oil is now available. The standard for EVOO is 250 mg of polyphenols per kilogram of oil, but HP-EVOO can include as much as 1,000 mg per kilogram.  

How does consuming fat help reduce obesity? Eating fat does not make one fat, and poly and monounsaturated fats provide substantial nutritional benefits. 

Extra virgin olive oil is a monounsaturated, health-supportive fat. Consuming this type of fat — along with a high-fiber meal — actually slows the passage of food through the GI tract. This slow down gives hormones a chance to get cracking and tell the brain that the body has taken in food. Plus, mindfully eating, at a slower pace, allows one’s brain to catch up to the stomach, and feelings of satisfaction set in before over-consuming energy (calories).  

Slower digestion, when also coupled with the elenolic acid found in olives, helps lower and control spikes in blood sugar. When insulin release and blood sugar level are less erratic, the effect is less drastic signals of hunger. 

Consuming moderate amounts of fat, which help a body feel full, can help one consume less calories overall. Satiety, the feeling of fullness, also comes from the psychological feeling of satisfaction. The mouth feel of fat, and the richness of foods that contain fat are recognized by the brain as signs of nutritional density. A high-quality olive oil, for example, will provide a deep flavor and textural experience. 

The Magic of GLP-1 and Olive Oil

The robust flavor of a quality EVOO can also indicate high levels of polyphenols, which increase the presence of GLP-1 in the small intestine. Once used only to regulate blood sugar in diabetics, synthetic versions of GLP-1 revolutionized the weight-loss industry.  

But when we ingest olive oil, it also activates GLP-1, one of the hormones that regulates movement through the gastrointestinal tract, communicates with the brain’s reward system, and controls blood sugar. 

What is GLP-1?

The injectable GLP-1s are super-charged versions of the hormone our body already makes, and something of a quick fix for moderate weight loss. The prescription version stays in the blood stream longer, giving it more time to affect the brain, and having a greater impact on the pancreas and stomach. This is why these medications result in such rapid weight loss, but also some tough side effects. The injectable GLP-1 slows down the emptying of the stomach so much that it can cause stagnation and possible weakening of the muscles responsible for peristalsis. It can also cause a complete disinterest in food because it works so well on the brain’s reward receptors. This can result in undereating, which can then cause muscle atrophy, and hair loss.  

Moderate consumption of extra virgin olive oil, especially HP-EVOO, can promote a healthy environment where GLP-1 hormones are produced and able to work naturally. 

Connecting the Gut to GLP-1

In addition to slowing digestion, and increasing psychological satiety, EVOO can improve the health of our gut microbiome. The term gut is vague — sometimes it’s used to describe every organ involved in digestion, but typically, it refers to the stomach and intestines. Biome is used to describe the living environment that exists in the intestines. A lot happens in the gut; it even has its own direct line to the brain: vagus nerve. Often the gut is referred to as the second brain, because it has its own special nervous system — the enteric nervous system. As previously discussed, the gut releases hormones, making its health of great importance to the endocrine system. The gastrointestinal tract is the body’s largest endocrine organ. The endocrine cells within the GI are collectively called the enteric endocrine.  

Because GLP-1 is a hormone released in the small intestine, its efficacy is greatly affected by the health of the gut biome.  

Powering Your Immune System, Too

We can’t leave out the immune system either, as the gut houses up to 80% of the body’s immune cells, making it the largest site of immune activity in the body. This is why protecting the gut is pivotal in combating chronic disease.  

Chronic inflammation is linked to chronic disease, and good gut health can help to regulate inflammation. The lining of the intestines needs to stay intact to allow for the absorption of nutrients and to prevent the leaking of bad bacteria and food particles. The intestines are full of tiny organisms that comprise the gut biome. Having a robust colony of helpful microorganisms is what keeps the intestines working at their prime. That Standard America Diet, ruins this too. Bad bacteria loves refined sugar, additives, and preservatives. When this is consumed, the bacteria becomes fueled and can out number the good bacteria. This imbalance can cause leaky gut which can be a contributing factor in skin problems, cholesterol imbalance, mood disorders, food allergies, and other immune dysfunctions. 

Two olives hang from an olive branch.
Photo Courtesy of Boudewijn Huysmans

So, How Can You Use Extra Virgin Olive Oil to Benefit Your Health?

How can you care for your gut? Extra virgin olive oil, in addition to a diverse, plant-fiber rich diet is a simple and natural, first step. EVOO is one of the best whole food sources of polyphenols, which are antioxidant compounds in plants. There are around 8,000 of them in nature and good gut organisms love them. When you consume polyphenols the gut bacteria eat them up and produce short-chain fatty acids that keep the lining of the intestines healthy. A high-quality EVOO has a peppery flavor, slight bitterness, and might cause a burning sensation at the back of one’s throat: These are all signs of the presence of lots of polyphenols. Red cabbage is another source of high levels of polyphenols. 

Polyphenols are mighty but fragile. Production, and improper storage, of EVOO can jeopardize the presence and amount or polyphenols available.  

Key Components

For the greatest health benefits look for: cold-pressed oil sold in a dark glass bottle; a date of harvest, press, or expiration; and the words “high phenolic” in an evoo.  

Heat and chemicals are a polythenol’s worst enemy. With that in mind, consumption of EVOO like adding it to a smoothie, juice, salad dressing, or drizzling on top of a dish is ideal. But, you can also use it for cooking at low-to-moderate temperatures. It is possible to use olive oil at higher temps, such as frying, but with the increase in temperature, there is some decline in nutritional potency. Even at higher temperatures, EVOO is a better choice than many vegetable and seed oils.    

The might sounds like a stretch, but a healthy gut can also improve mobility. Stability of the skeleton, muscle strength, flexibility, and cushioning and lubrication in the joints, improve with proper nutrition. As we age, we lose bone and muscle mass, and cartilage in the joints can become craggy and painful. Poor nutrient absorption, the presence of free-radicals, and chronic inflammation can begin this process prematurely.    

A Splash of… Vitamins?

It’s not just EVOO’s antioxidant polyphenols that help here, but also fat-soluble vitamins, which as the name implies; require dietary fat to be absorbed by the body. Vitamins A, D, E, and K play major roles in skeletal and joint health. On its own, olive oil is high in vitamins E and K, and it also improves the absorption of A and D. The combination of EVOO’s polyphenols and these fat-soluble vitamins can prolong the life of the body. It’s like changing the oil in a car. If you put bad oil in a car, the engine will not survive as long as it could if there was good, clean oil to keep it humming. Same for the body — without proper care, cells and the structures built with them can oxidize and become brittle and rough. 

It’s fascinating how the mechanisms of the body work together and have bidirectional relationships. The body is like any environment in which all the systems must work in sync to achieve optimal health. If the gut biome starts to get out of whack, there may be an increase in inflammation. Inflammation may cause joint pain, and joint pain may lead to less movement. Less movement can lead to weight gain. Then weight gain strains the heart and we see the beginning of chronic heart disease. This chain of events can start in several different places within these bidirectional relationships, and present in many different ways. That’s what is so great about EVOO — it hits all three of these major factors important for overall health and wellness. 

Blessed Extra Virgin Olive Oil 

Thank the Greek gods for extra virgin olive oil. Ancient civilizations knew how beneficial extra virgin oil is, an oil which is not easy to produce. I don’t think they would go to the trouble of making the Trapetum, Mola Olearia, or the Rolling Stone Crusher — all olive crushing devices —  if there were not significant benefits. That’s why, still today, the price point for a quality bottle of extra virgin olive oil may seem high. Always do research when spending a significant amount on a bottle of oil because all EVOO is not the same in quality — and a high price does not always imply a quality product.  

Rest assured — the health benefits that come from regularly consuming a quality olive oil you enjoy, will last a lifetime. We’d say, “Just ask Caesar,” but we all know what happened to him. Which was absolutely not the fault of olive oil! 

Recipes to Increase Your Extra Virgin Olive Oil Consumption

Are you interested in increasing the amount of olive oil you eat? Try these wonderful recipes from TABLE Magazine

Herb-Infused Olive Oil

Two textured clear glass bottles with cork closure, filled with homemade herb-infused olive oil made with dried rosemary, thyme, and oregano.

Authentic Italian Bruschetta with Basil-Infused Olive Oil

Bruschetta on a plate beside some heirloom tomatoes

Lemon Spaghettini with Olives and Anchovies

a full plate of Lemon Spaghettini with Olives and Anchovies lying on a table

Sautéed Cauliflower with Olives and Capers

Sautéed Cauliflower with Olives and Capers - A Mediterranean-inspired fall side dish, combining the freshness of California with European culinary wisdom.

Halibut & Asparagus in Papillote with Olive & Herb Relish

A plate of fish in papillote with an olive and herb relish.

Toasted Red Quinoa with Pickled Vegetables

A cast iron skillet with toasted red quinoa and pickled vegetables, with two black bowls and a fork on the side.

Pesto-Burrata Crostini

A variety of Pesto-Burrata Crostinis with spears of asparagus beside them.

Panzanella with Roasted Tomatoes

Panzanella with roasted tomatoes on a green dish

Easy Pesto Pasta 

A plate full of Easy Pesto Pasta with sausage, lemon slices, and asparagus all in a green sauce.

Story by Kristen Palmer
Featured Photo by Roberta Sorge

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8 Recipes to Get You Started on a Flexitarian Diet

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A plate full of Easy Pesto Pasta with sausage, lemon slices, and asparagus all in a green sauce.

Thinking about eating more plants without giving up meat entirely? The flexitarian diet offers the perfect balance. It’s all about plant-forward meals with the occasional inclusion of animal protein. This way you can enjoy the flavors you love while boosting nutrition and variety. To help you get started, we’ve rounded up eight delicious and approachable recipes that make it easy to put plants first while still enjoying meat, seafood, and other proteins in moderation.

Recipes for a Flexitarian Diet

Beef Bulgogi Bowls

A beef bulgogi bowl with rice, cucumbers, radishes, carrots, and beef.

These bowls are a healthy way to include meat in a flexitarian diet by pairing a modest portion of beef with plenty of vegetables, rice, as well as fermented toppings like kimchi. The bowl format is also allows for variety so your meat is only a corner of your meal and the rest are plant-based ingredients.

Easy Pesto Pasta

A plate full of Easy Pesto Pasta with sausage, lemon slices, and asparagus all in a green sauce.

Herbaceous pesto, tender asparagus, savory Italian sausage, and a touch of cream and lemon, what more could you ask for? Not only is this recipe super simple but it also balances protein with plenty of veggies. Try it as is or lighten it by reducing the meat and adding extra vegetables.

Martha Stewart-Inspired Slow Cooker Tom Kha Gai

A grey bowl full of a Martha Stewart Slow Cooker Tom Kha Gai with leafy greens garnish sits on a green picnic table.

This is a fragrant Thai-style chicken and coconut soup that centers on aromatic broth, herbs, and vegetables. There’s just enough lean chicken to meet your protein needs. Bright lime, lemongrass, and galangal build layers of flavor, letting you even swap in tofu if you prefer.

Pork & Shrimp Shumai

A plate of Pork and Shrimp Shumai dumplings hold with chopsticks with a sauce drizzled over top.

This recipe turns traditional Chinese dumplings into a dish that fits into a flexitarian diet. The dumplings combine lean pork and seafood in small, bite-sized portions. Serve them with a big side of greens or a salad to make them a part of a balanced meal.

Garden Herb Cured Salmon Salad

A colorful and fresh-looking salad featuring thin slices of cured salmon, diced beets, shaved fennel, and orange segments, artfully arranged on a plate and drizzled with a creamy crème fraîche dressing and lavender honey.

Our Cured Salmon Salad pairs thinly sliced, herb-cured salmon with crisp vegetables and citrusy accents. This light, protein-rich dish keeps the red meat away and also loads up on the fresh ingredients. The cured salmon even adds omega-3-rich protein.

Seafood Escabeche Salad

A dark plate holds garden vegetables and seafood in an escabeche salad with a fork and herbs to the right of the plate.

Skip heaviness and opt for a pickled mix of calamari, shrimp, and mussels. Toss them with crunchy vegetables in a vinegar-olive oil marinade. For a flexitarian diet, it’s a great to lean into seafood alongside plant-rich ingredients.

Bolognese Sauce (Ragù)

A plate of flat-noodle wide pasta with a meat bolognese ragu sauce on top, all sitting on a green plate.

Everyone should know how to make a Bolognese Sauce. Slow-simmered tomato and aromatic vegetables let a modest amount of ground meat play a supporting role. Pair it with whole-grain pasta or hearty legumes and also pile on sautéed greens or roasted veggies.

Healthy BLT Salad

A plated BLT salad with large red heirloom tomatoes in it on a white background

We turn the classic bacon-lettuce-tomato sandwich into a healthy salad that uses plant-forward thinking. We also recommend adding on beans or whole grains as a small side so the bacon complements rather than defines the meal.

Story by Kylie Thomas

8 Pasta Recipes to Avoid the Grocery Store Inflation of 2026

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A bowl of BLT pasta with golden spaghetti, bacon pieces, red and yellow halved cherry tomatoes, and fresh green basil leaves.

Feeling the pinch at the grocery store? With prices on the rise in 2026, finding meals that are both satisfying and budget-friendly can feel like a challenge. Pasta comes to the rescue. It’s versatile, filling, and pairs beautifully with simple, affordable ingredients. Not to mention, it’s one of the ingredients that is unlikely to face price inflation in 2026. Instead, it’s easy to make in bulk, simple to store, and has a long shelf life. We’re recommending eight delicious pasta recipes that allow you to still enjoy comforting and flavorful dinners without breaking the bank.

Pasta Recipes to Save Yourself from Grocery Inflation in 2026

Martha Stewart-Inspired One Pan Pasta

In a skillet pan sits a large servings of pasta with tomatoes, basil, and cheese on top. It all sits on a picnic table with forks and a small container of parmesan underneath the pan.

A simple, flavorful pasta made entirely in one pan. Inspired by Martha Stewart, this dish simmers pasta with tomatoes, garlic, onion, and basil to create a light, silky sauce with minimal effort and cleanup. Perfect for weeknights.

Bigoli in Salsa

A plate of whole-wheat spaghetti (bigoli in salsa) on a striped placemat.

This classic Venetian pasta that pairs whole-wheat bigoli with a savory sauce of slow cooked onions and rich sardines or anchovies. You can even use canned fish in this recipe which adds another layer for money-saving deliciousness.

Fettuccine Alfredo

A black dish filled with Fettucine Aldredo made by Victoria Sande.

Everyone needs to have a Fettuccine Alfredo recipe on hand. This particular recipe adds aromatic green onion and a hint of peperoncino for deeper flavor. It’s smooth, comforting, and far from ordinary.

BLT Pasta

A bowl of BLT pasta with golden spaghetti, bacon pieces, red and yellow halved cherry tomatoes, and fresh green basil leaves.

What if you could make your favorite sandwich into a pasta dish? This pasta captures all the best parts of a BLT like the crunch of bacon, juicy grape tomatoes, and fresh greens. We also toss it with cream and olive oil, turning everyday ingredients into a hearty meal.

Easy Pesto Pasta

A plate full of Easy Pesto Pasta with sausage, lemon slices, and asparagus all in a green sauce.

Make the most of herbaceous pesto by adding in savory Italian sausage, farm-fresh asparagus, and toasted pine nuts. A squeeze of lemon and a touch of cheese elevate these ingredients to luxury.

Bolognese Sauce (Ragù)

A plate of flat-noodle wide pasta with a meat bolognese ragu sauce on top, all sitting on a green plate.

Rather than buying sauce at the store, making your own is rewarding and endows you with plenty of leftovers for other days. All this sauce takes is ground beef, vegetables, wine, milk, and tomatoes to build layers of big flavor that put modest amounts of ground beef to great use.

Heirloom Tomato Tripoline

An above shot of a white plate that holds pasta, Heirloom Tomato Tripoline

An impressive pasta relies on simplicity rather than splurging. Heirloom tomatoes in butter and basil coat tender tripoline. This recipe is perfect for delivering deep flavor from just a few inexpensive ingredients.

Stanley Tucci Inspired Rigatoni with Salsiccia alla Maria Rosa

A plate of rigatoni with tomato sauce, inspired by Stanley Tucci

A rigatoni dish inspired by Stanley Tucci’s passion for Italian cuisine features spicy Italian sausage and a rich Maria Rosa tomato sauce. Every bite interacts with elements of freshness, making it a comforting yet sophisticated at the same time.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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Budget-Friendly Bean Recipes to Save Money During 2026’s Inflation

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A blue bowl holdsbraised cabbage and beans topped with a lemon slice and accompanied by a fork, spoon, and glass of lemon water.

As grocery prices continue to rise in 2026, finding affordable, nutritious meals has never been more important. Beans are a versatile, protein-packed pantry staple that can stretch your budget without sacrificing flavor. These easy and delicious bean recipes help you save money while keeping mealtime as something you look forward to.

Budget-Friendly Bean Recipes

Crispy Butter Beans with Whipped Chevre

Crispy Butter Beans with Whipped Chèvre - a delectable side dish featuring Goat Rodeo’s fresh chèvre cheese

Golden, crunchy butter beans are roasted to perfection and served alongside a smooth, tangy whipped chèvre. This easy recipe transforms boring butter beans into something you’ll want to serve for a Sunday family meal.

Braised Cabbage and Beans

A blue bowl holdsbraised cabbage and beans topped with a lemon slice and accompanied by a fork, spoon, and glass of lemon water.

Cook up a one‑pot dish that transforms humble cabbage and beans into a deeply comforting meal you’ll crave on chilly nights. Tender cabbage simmers slowly with beans, onions, garlic, and a bright squeeze of lemon.

Steaming Pot of Beans and Greens

A large bowl of steaming white beans and chopped kale stew garnished with carrots and tomatoes, served with crusty bread/garlic knots and a side salad on a green wooden table.

Hearty cannellini beans and tender kale bathe in a bowl of garlic, carrots, sage, roasted tomatoes, and lemon. Try finishing your bowl with a sprinkle of Parmesan, lemon zest, and a drizzle of olive oil along with a side of crusty bread.

Stanley Tucci Inspired Cannellini Beans and Greens alla Maria Rosa

A Stanley Tucci inspired beans and greens recipe on a bright green background

We’re always finding new ways to use beans. We like to change up the flavors so that we can feast on this ingredient several days a week. This plant‑forward Italian dish pairs cannellini beans with Maria Rosa sauce and wilted Tuscan kale.

Wintertime Rice and Beans

Wintertime Rice and Beans served in a steel bowl

Hearty rice and two kinds of beans intermingle with warming Vindaloo curry spice, star anise, and a touch of saffron to create a bowl that’s perfect for cold days. Simple to make yet full of global flair, this dish takes classic rice and beans to new heights.

Giant Beans with Honey and Dill

On a white plate sits a mound of GIANT BEANS WITH HONEY AND DILL.

If you’ve never tried Greek giant beans, you’re missing out. These beans roast in a tomato-onion sauce with notes of honey and fresh dill. While this can make a quick lunch, try it along with a main dish like chicken for low-cost, big-reward.

Roasted Acorn Squash with Lemony Pinto Beans and Zhoug

A side dish of Roasted Acorn Squash with Lemony Pinto Beans and Zhoug in an orange bowl. A gold spoon sits to the left. Zhoug Recipe

This dish brings together sweet, caramelized acorn squash and lemon pinto beans with a punchy zhoug sauce for a finish that’s bold and balanced. Not to mention, the protein and other health benefits from this dish are a must.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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Build Santa a Cookie Plate on Christmas Eve

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A plate of warm chocolate chip cookies and a glass of milk on a festive rug, with pine branches and a fireplace glowing in the background.

Christmas Eve is filled with anticipation, wonder, and traditions that make the holiday feel truly magical. One of the most cherished moments of the night is preparing a special cookie plate for Santa, a small but meaningful gesture that delights children and adults alike. Building Santa a cookie plate offers an opportunity to slow down, get creative, and enjoy time together while adding a personal touch to the evening’s festivities. Thoughtfully chosen treats, festive presentation, and a bit of holiday imagination turn this simple tradition into a memorable experience that captures the spirit of Christmas and keeps the magic alive well into the night.

Gingerbread Cookies

A pile of gingerbread cookies decorated with white icing and red bulb sprinles.

While baking these warmly spiced cookies, fill your home with the inviting scents of cinnamon and ginger. Have fun with your little ones shaping these into festive figures. Whether you decorate them with icing or let their traditional form shine, each bite is full of holiday cheer.

Pine Needle Shortbread Cookies

A dark green plate filled with Christmas tree-shaped shortbread cookies, some dusted with powdered sugar.

Add a woodland twist to your cookie plate this Christmas Eve. These buttery cookies feature finely chopped pine needles, giving them the flavor of winter forests. Finish them with a light dusting of powdered sugar as a memorable treat to share while preparing for Santa’s visit.

Glendorn Chocolate Chip Cookies

A plate of warm chocolate chip cookies and a glass of milk on a festive rug, with pine branches and a fireplace glowing in the background.

You can’t have Christmas without the timeless chocolate chip cookie. This particular recipe creates cookies with golden edges as well as soft, chewy centers. You just may want to make an extra batch of these ones so that there are still some available for Santa at the end of the night.

Mom’s Iced Christmas Sugar Cookies

A few holiday themed Iced Sugar Cookies sit on a metal tin tray with ribbon and ornament bulbs around the try.

Add a burst of color and creativity to your Christmas Eve cookie plate with classic sugar cookies. Soft, buttery cut-outs become a festive canvas for icing, sprinkles, and anything else your mind desires. It’s a nostalgic treat that Santa is sure to love.

French Meringue Cookies

A plate full of French meringue cookies in snowflake shapes and topped with cherries amongst a table full of cookies.

Airy little clouds of sweetness give you a bit of a break from the cake-like texture of Christmas cookies. You can even pipe the meringue into various shapes such as the snowflakes above. Adding this cookie to your plate makes sure you have a variety ready for Santa.

Drinks Other Than Milk to Leave Out for Santa

Eight Maids-a-Milking Coconut Coquito

A set of coquito cocktails on a black bavkground

Even Santa could use a break from the cold to dream of the tropics. Creamy and spiced this recipe is inspired by the traditional Puerto Rican holiday favorite, coquito. Rich with coconut flavor, baking spices, and a touch of rum, this velvety drink feels like a cozy hug.

Coffee and Bourbon Cocktail, The Revolver

The Revolver is a bold and sophisticated whiskey cocktail with a balanced blend of rich bourbon, aromatic coffee liqueur, and a touch of zesty orange bitters, garnished with an orange twist.

When delivering presents to all the children all over the world, we could use a hard one ourselves. Keep Santa awake and warm as he sips on The Revolver. A hint of orange bitters finds the perfect middle between the coffee and bourbon. Just go easy on the serving size, he still has a sleigh to drive after all!

Cardamom and Clove Oat Milk Latte

A cardamom and clove oat milk latte in front of a small espresso machine.

In case your Santa prefers something warming without the booze, there’s a recipe for him too. It’s a latte that wraps rich spices and creamy oat milk together. Thoughtful, soothing, and full of seasonal charm, it’s a perfect companion to a cookie plate.

Story by Kylie Thomas

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Margarita Verde

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Margarita Verde with smoking wood as garnish greenery in the background

Chef Richard Sandoval’s Art of Zero-Proof reimagines a mid-century classic. The Margarita Verde boldly reworks the iconic 1960s cocktail. It uses non-alcoholic Almave Blanco and Lyre’s Orange Sec as its spirited foundation. Layers of herbal pandan and subtle jalapeño warmth build complexity, while hoja santa oil and Palo Santo smoke add a final aromatic signature. This modern craft cocktail engages all the senses, from its oolong salt rim to its smoky finish.

Explore more delicuous spirit-free cocktails in our complete Dry January mocktail guide.

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Margarita Verde with smoking wood as garnish greenery in the background

Margarita Verde


  • Author: Chef Richard Sandoval

Description

An herbal, smoky zero-proof margarita.

 


Ingredients

Scale
  • 2 oz Almave blanco 
  • .5 oz Lyre’s Orange Sec
  • .5 oz Lime juice
  • .25 Pandan & Jalapeño syrup
  • 5 drops Hoja Santa & pink pepper oil
  • Oolong salt rim
  • Palo Santo Stick


Instructions

  1. In a cocktail shaker, combine Almave Blanco  with Lyre’s non-alcoholic orange liqueur, lime juice, and pandan syrup with ice and shake.
  2. Serve in a Nick and Nora glass (previously garnished with Hoja Santa salt) using a strainer.
  3. Garnish with a Hoja Santa coin and drops of Hoja Santa & pink pepper oil.
  4. Light with Palo Santo stick on fire and place across rim of glass and a circle made of hoja santa lea

Recipe by Chef Richard Sandoval
Photography Courtesy of Richard Sandoval Hospitality

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Espresso Maíztini

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Espresso Maiztini with coffee beans in foreground

The classic espresso martini receives a playful, zero-proof makeover with the Espresso Maíztini. This inventive cocktail from Richard Sandoval’s Art of Zero-Proof guide swaps traditional spirits for Ritual Zero-Proof Rum and a unique, buttered popcorn-infused coffee liqueur. Cold brew and a touch of corn syrup build a rich, smooth base. Finally, a fragrant clove and cinnamon foam elegantly crowns the drink. This recipe delivers the bold, cozy flavors of the original in an entirely new way.

Click here to find more for Dry January mocktails!

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Espresso Maiztini with coffee beans in foreground

Espresso Maíztini


  • Author: Chef Richard Sandoval

Description

This martini mixes buttered popcorn-infused coffee liqueur with zero-proof rum and cold brew, topped with a spiced foam.


Ingredients

Scale


Instructions

  1. Infuse the freshly popped popcorn with the non-alcoholic coffee liqueur, strain.
  2. In a shaker, add the rum, na coffee liqueur, cold brew, corn syrup and shake with ice.
  3. Strain and serve in a chilled glass.
  4. Garnish with a clove and cinnamon foam and coffee beans

Recipe by Chef Richard Sandoval
Photography Courtesy of Richard Sandoval Hospitality

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