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Asparagus with Soft‑Boiled Egg & Buttermilk Dressing

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On a blue plate, three soft-boiled eggs sit on the left side while stalks of asparagus covered in Buttermilk Dressing and Sourdough Croutons sits to the right.
A savory veggie-forward dish.

Chef Curtis Gamble, the owner of Station in Bloomfield, invited TABLE Magazine to spend a day in his kitchen with simple recipes and springtime flavors, like the below asparagus and soft-boiled egg combo.

Asparagus and Soft-Boiled Egg with Buttermilk Dressing and Sourdough Croutons Tossed in Tarragon Salsa Verde Recipe

INGREDIENTS

2 bunches extra-large asparagus, blanched
EVOO
2 slices of toasted sourdough
Tarragon Salsa Verde (recipe follows)
Soft-boiled egg
Red wine vinegar

Buttermilk Dressing 

2 egg yolks
2 lemons zest and juice
2 tbsp Dijon mustard
2 tbsp champagne vinegar
1 tbsp water
2 tbsp dill, minced
2 tbsp parsley, minced
2 tbsp chives, chopped
12 oz canola oil
12 oz buttermilk

In the food processor bowl, combine all ingredients except oil and buttermilk. With the processor running slowly, add oil in a small steady stream until incorporated, and you have mayo! Add buttermilk in a steady stream as well and season with salt and pepper to taste.

Soft-Boiled Egg 

6 eggs

Prepare an ice bath and bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Drop eggs in and cook for exactly 5 min. Place in ice water to cool. Once cool, peel.

Tarragon Salsa Verde

1 bunch parsley
4 oz tarragon, rough-chopped
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
1 tbsp cracked whole coriander
1 tbsp cracked whole fennel
1 tsp smoked paprika
1 tsp aleppo pepper flakes
1 whole shallot minced
2 cloves garlic, minced
Zest of 2 lemons

Combine all ingredients and add salt and pepper to taste.

To finish:

Spoon a small amount of buttermilk dressing onto a serving platter. In a mixing bowl, toss asparagus with salt, pepper, red wine vinegar, and a touch of EVOO. Place over buttermilk. Into the same bowl, add torn, bite-size pieces of toasted sourdough, toss with the salsa verde, and spoon over the asparagus. Slice your eggs in half, quickly place over the asparagus, and serve immediately.

Story and styling by Keith Recker / Photography by Dave Bryce / Food and recipe by Chef Curtis Gamble, Station

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Boozy Braised Beef Short Ribs

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Beef short ribs covered in a boozy tomato sauce. The meat sits on a black plate with bread sitting to the left.

Braising meat is mankind’s greatest achievement — no complaints about the wheel, fire, and the whole moon-landing thing — but slowly cooking a cut of meat with select liquids, spices, and strategic veg, elicits the kind of emotions that inspired kingdoms to be built, poems to be written, and expensive dutch ovens to be purchased without a hint of regret. Best of all, braising is nearly impossible to mess up, so if you’re kitchen dabbling or fluent in all things home cookery, a good braised meat scenario is the perfect option for creative comfort. This short rib recipe is a statement on richness and flavor. An inky red wine, yes an entire bottle, and stout beer tenderize, lift, and transform the rib meat into “finally organizing-the-pantry” good. Plus, the sauce…. fuggedaboutit.

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Beef short ribs covered in a boozy tomato sauce. The meat sits on a black plate with bread sitting to the left.

Boozy Braised Beef Short Ribs


  • Author: Gabe Gomez
  • Yield: Serves 6

Description

A little bit of booze in this recipe goes a long way.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 5 pounds very meaty bone-in beef short ribs, cut into 2-inch chunks
  • Olive oil
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 cups chopped celery
  • 2 cups chopped yellow onions
  • 2 cups chopped carrots
  • 5 garlic cloves minced
  • 1 Bottle Cotes du Rhone
  • 4 cups beef stock
  • 1 cup canned crushed tomatoes
  • 1 bottle stout beer
  • 6 sprigs fresh thyme (tied)
  • 1 tablespoon all purpose flour
  • 1 tablespoon butter


Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F.
  2. Mix olive oil, 1 tablespoon salt, 1 tablespoon pepper, and short ribs together, coat evenly.
  3. Brown ribs in a dutch oven. Remove when browned on all sides.
  4. Add celery, onions, and carrots and cook over medium heat for 15 minutes.
  5. Add the garlic and cook for one minute.
  6. Add butter and flour to the mixture until combined with vegetables; medium heat (5 minutes).
  7. Add the wine; bring to a boil then lower to simmer over medium heat for 10 minutes, until the liquid is reduced.
  8. Add the stock, tomatoes, beer, and thyme; simmer on medium 5 minutes.
  9. Place the ribs in the pot; bring up to a boil, cover, and cook in the oven for 2.5 hours or until the meat is fork tender.
  10. Enjoy with grilled brioche rolls or artisanal bread, because you won’t want to waste a drop of that “oh hell yes” sauce.

Story and Recipe by Gabe Gomez / Photography and Styling by Keith Recker

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A Working Kitchen

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Interior designer Colleen Simonds brings to life a center for food and family and fun.

Sometimes a renovation goes on for so long that your home takes on a sort of local notoriety. “Oh, you live in that house,” people would say to Colleen Simonds of her two-and-a-half-year-long project in Shadyside. The location on a relatively busy corner made it even more visible to the neighbors, and took some getting used to after living in an apartment in New York City for 15 years.

Like most construction projects, what started out as a fairly quick process eventually blossomed into something much larger, including adding an addition to the house and gutting the kitchen and elsewhere. Everything was basically rebuilt from the ground up. The kitchen itself, in this traditional circa 1911 Foursquare, had high ceilings — pretty much the only thing that was retained. The major layout change was that the current eat-in dining area was swapped in for the separate original, and more formal, room.

Simonds admits she is not a great cook, although she wishes she were; rather, her husband is the chef in the family, and he had a fair amount of input into how the kitchen should operate. “We did spend a lot of time thinking about where things needed to be and the functionality,” she says. “It’s definitely a working kitchen that we use a lot.”

The overall footprint of the original structure wasn’t altered, so there were certain limitations. There was no room for an island, for example, because the kitchen couldn’t be made wide enough to incorporate one. Instead, it is a generous galley kitchen with plenty of counter space and cabinetry, much of the latter floor-to-ceiling.

One of the first striking things about the space is the cabinetry, which is painted a dark blue shade, Railings by Farrow & Ball. “It’s a very dark navy that some people think is dark gray. I chose it because I love navy, but also because it’s easy to live with. It’s not anything I’m going to get sick of.” Such a dark hue could be risky in the cloudiest city in the US (says the World Atlas), but the kitchen possesses several attributes that make it work, including high ceilings and a large window that lets in a lot of (often gray) light. “I was never going to have a plain white kitchen.” A peek at her website shows most decidedly that Simonds is not color-shy.

An expanse of soapstone countertops, also in a gray-navy with veining that can sometimes look green, constantly changes color depending on where you are standing and the time of day. “I love marble . . . for other people. But for here it didn’t seem like the right choice.” Soapstone isn’t indestructible, but Simonds is okay with that. “It does scratch a little bit, is a little softer, but that doesn’t really bother me.” She also likes how it plays with the blue of the cabinets and other elements in the room. “I like the drama of it. It almost makes the cabinets look a little bit more blue.”

Appliances were chosen for function and, of course, their good looks. The dual-fuel Wolf range has a continuous top rather than separate ones for each burner, a plus for moving around lots of heavy pots and pans in the heat of meal preparation. The Best Eclisse range hood was chosen for its minimal profile, again providing lightness. Likewise, the Wolf microwave is a drawer model that lives under the counter. “I don’t like to look at a microwave up on a shelf.” Those shelves are custom-made and more or less float, allowing the white subway tile to reflect and scatter the available light.

The bar area has plenty of storage space for wine and glasses, and includes a mini sink, small Sub-Zero refrigerator for wine and nibbles, and a small Fisher & Paykel drawer dishwasher. Nearby a breezeway connects the garage and her office (the addition) to the house, and includes a long row of blue floor-to-ceiling cabinetry that matches that in the kitchen.

For the now-integrated dining area, Simonds opted for an exuberant color mix. She began with a classic, the Saarinen table, and layered on from there. “We’re a young family with kids and I wanted the space to feel not so serious, kind of fun. And practical because this is where we eat all the time.” She bought vintage chairs and rehabbed them, something she loves to do for clients as well. “You get something one-of-a-kind, interesting looking, and less expensive than brand new.” The two large panel paintings on the wall above the sideboard are by Pittsburgh artist Mia Tarducci, who’s also a friend. They never had room to put them up in New York, so it was always planned they would be used here.

The wallpaper, bold as it is, actually came later. “I didn’t plan that up front, but the room needed one other thing. It was too white with all the walls and ceiling, and it needed another element. I didn’t want to put in a rug—I don’t put rugs under kitchen tables because they get gross—so I ended up adding the wallpaper.” (It’s Peter Dunham Fig Leaf in blue on white, a particular favorite of Simonds). With the ceilings being so high, the graphic pattern draws your eye upwards but doesn’t overwhelm. “It pulls in the darker tones from the cabinetry and the brighter blues in the chairs and the paintings. It’s happy. I like spaces to feel optimistic.” colleensimonds.com

APPLIANCES SOURCED BY DON’S APPLIANCES

Wolf Transitional Drawer Microwave

Best Eclisse 36-inch Wall Mount Chimney-Style Range Hood

Wolf Legacy Dual Fuel Range

Sub-Zero Designer Undercounter Beverage Center

Fisher & Paykel Integrated Single DishDrawer™ Dishwasher

Story by Stephen Treffinger / Photography by Dave Bryce / Styling by Keith Recker / Design by Colleen Simonds

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Espresso Whiskey Martini

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Two Espresso Whiskey Martini fills one purple and one blue martini glasses, adorned with gold accents.

After a few days spent with relatives, there’s a good chance your go-to espresso martini recipe might not do the trick. So, we tweaked and combined a few of our favorite recipes to create this spirited cure for any-time-of-year stresses: the espresso whiskey martini, a dessert and cocktail wrapped into one delicious drink. Sweet, hazelnut-y Frangelico liquor adds a delectable element to this coffee-forward cocktail that we can’t get enough of.

What is Frangelico?

This Espresso Whiskey Martini mixes up the classic recipe a little bit with one new addition: Frangelico. It’s a close cousin of amaretto, but not exactly the same. Like amaretto, it’s a nut-flavored liqueur, but Frangelico is more hazelnut-forward than almond-forward. Amaretto is much more subtle, whereas Frangelico is very sweet. One whiff of the bottle is like smelling candied Tonda Gentile hazelnuts. But that makes it perfect for a sweet and nutty cocktail balanced by other bitter ingredients, like espresso and whiskey. Frangelico also makes a fun buy if only for the bottle shape alone; it gets its name from a monk from the Peidmont region of Italy, and its bottle is shaped like a monk with a tiny rope belt. Strange and adorable! 

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Two Espresso Whiskey Martini fills one purple and one blue martini glasses, adorned with gold accents.

Espresso Whiskey Martini


  • Author: Maggie Weaver

Description

A festive way to enjoy coffee and whiskey together!


Ingredients

Scale
  • 1 oz freshly-brewed espresso
  • 1 ½ oz whiskey
  • 1/2 oz heavy cream
  • ½ oz Frangelico
  • Cinnamon, for dusting
  • Whipped cream, to garnish


Instructions

  1. Add all ingredients to a shaker and shake with ice.
  2. Pour into a glass, top with whipped cream, cinnamon, and enjoy this twist on an espresso martini!

Recipe by Maggie Weaver
Photography by Dave Bryce 

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Spring Salad with Saffron Vinaigrette

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An aerial view of a Spring Time Salad with Saffron Vinaigrette, which sits on a white plate. A white fork and knife are positioned to the left of the salad.
The saffron adds a subtle floral note to the dressing, while the roasted chickpeas provide a satisfying crunch.

Whether enjoyed as a side dish or a main course, our Spring Time Salad with Saffron Vinaigrette is sure to delight your taste buds and nourish your body with a refreshing mix of seasonal greens, juicy avocado, and tangy feta cheese crumbles. Topped with crunchy roasted chickpeas and dressed in a light saffron vinaigrette, it’s perfect for a warm spring day.

What are Seasonal Spring Vegetables? 

Eating seasonal produce can be a great way to stay with the rhythm of the earth. Most of the time, in-season produce has more nutrients because it hasn’t had to travel as far as out-of-season produce that needs to be imported. Here are some of the vegetables in season in spring (see which ones you can spot in this spring salad recipe:

  • Artichokes
  • Asparagus
  • Leafy Greens
  • Beets
  • Broccoli
  • Spring onions
  • Swiss chard
  • Turnips

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An aerial view of a Spring Time Salad with Saffron Vinaigrette, which sits on a white plate. A white fork and knife are positioned to the left of the salad.

Springtime Salad with Saffron Vinaigrette


  • Author: Anna Franklin

Description

A healthy salad with a deliciously luxurious spice.


Ingredients

Scale

For the salad:

  • 1 lb asparagus, tops only
  • 1 cup sprouts
  • 5 radishes, thinly sliced
  • 1 cup feta crumbles
  • 1 avocado, diced
  • 12 cups roasted chickpeas
  • 1/4 cup fresh dill sprigs
  • 1 head butter lettuce

For the vinaigrette:

  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 1 lemon, juiced
  • 1 tbsp honey
  • 1 tsp whole grain mustard
  • 1 tsp saffron


Instructions

  1. In a mason jar, add vinaigrette ingredients together and shake well. Let sit for at least 1 hour or overnight for the saffron to infuse.
  2. Arrange salad ingredients on a platter and top with vinaigrette. Serve immediately.

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Anna Franklin

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Chicken Chaap

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An aerial view of Chicken Chaap

Far from her native India, Asma Khan found herself biking through the biting cold of Cambridge, England, and missing home. As she passed by a house, a familiar scent captivated her: homemade parathas frying in ghee. She felt a sense of comfort that left her frozen in place despite the place being frozen. She no longer felt the cold. What she felt was homesickness.

The intensity of the emotions and aromas inspired a new quest. She needed to learn to cook the food of her home if she hoped to connect to this new place. She elaborates, “…food is a wonderful unifying force, providing a way for immigrants to make connections in a new country. Breaking bread with others leads to conversations about “home,” no matter how far away that place might be or how little knowledge of a country or culture people may have. I am always willing to share a plate of parathas with those who knock on my door.”

About Asma Khan 

Asma’s quest to learn to cook her native dishes eventually led her to open her London restaurant, Darjeeling Express. In the process, she came to truly appreciate the power of feeding people. “… the first thing I noticed was the silence that descended when the guests started eating – as if everything stopped for that moment. I knew then what my mother meant when she said one should cook to nourish the soul. I felt it in that moment of silence. My guests had been transported back home, back to another world, miles away….”

I’ve long been intimidated by the layered flavors and processes involved in Indian cooking, but Asma’s Indian Kitchen empowered me to make the leap, and I’m hoping you’ll join me. I’m already craving a repeat of the saffron-hued Chicken Chaap, and looking forward to trying more recipes, so grab your cookbook club friends, or simply join me in spirit. Whether this book transports you to your home, or opens up a conversation, here’s hoping for a moment of nourishing silence.

Let’s dig in!

About Chicken Chaap 

Asma describes this as a “unique dish from Bengal, a korma infused with mace and nutmeg that is quite different from the super-sweet raisin-and-nut-filled kormas served in many restaurants.” It’s creamy and comforting and not overly spicy, and I enjoyed finding a new way to use the Greek yogurt we always have in our fridge. Serve with extra pita or naan to soak up as much sauce as possible.

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Chicken Chaap on a frying pan with several side dishes on the sides

Chicken Chaap


  • Author: Asma Khan
  • Yield: Serves 6

Description

A creamy, satisfying Bengali dish.


Ingredients

Scale

For the garam masala:

  • 2 tsp cloves
  • 4 black cardamom pods
  • 1 nutmeg
  • 2 large pieces mace
  • 6 Indian bay leaves

For the chicken:

  • ¼ tsp good-quality saffron strands
  • ⅔ cup (150 ml) sunflower oil or other neutral oil
  • 5 onions, thinly sliced into half moons
  • 5 cups (2 lbs 10 oz /1.2 kg) thick Greek yogurt
  • 2 tbsp chopped garlic
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh ginger
  • 6 skinless, bone-in chicken thighs
  • 1 tbsp ground coriander
  • 2 tsp mild chili powder (preferably Kashmiri)
  • 4 tsp salt
  • 4 tsp sugar
  • 2 tsp sliced almonds, to garnish


Instructions

For the garam masala:

  1. In a dry frying pan, roast all the ingredients over medium heat, stirring constantly to prevent burning. The spices are ready when the cloves well, turn gray, and pop. Allow the spices to cool, then grind to a fine powder in a spice or coffee grinder. Any unused garam masala can be kept in an airtight container for a few weeks.

For the chicken:

  1. If using saffron to color the dish, in a small bowl, infuse the saffron strands in ¼ cup (60 ml) tepid water.
  2. In a frying pan, heat 6 Tablespoons of the oil over medium-high heat. Add the sliced onions to the pan and fry gently, occasionally stirring until golden brown and caramelized. Using a slotted spoon, remove the onions from the oil, leaving as much of the oil in the pan as possible to use later, and place on a plate to drain. Spread the onions across the plate so they crisp as they cool.
  3. In a large bowl, mix the yogurt with the garlic, ginger, 1 Tablespoon of the garam masala and the oil retained from the caramelized onions.
  4. In a pan that has a lid, heat the remaining 4 Tablespoons of oil over medium-high heat. Add the chicken and sear on all sides. Lower the heat to medium and pour the yogurt mixture over the chicken. Keep the heat at medium so the contents of the pan do not boil. Add the caramelized onions and ground coriander and cook, stirring continuously, for 10 minutes.
  5. When the oil rises to the surface and the yogurt splits, add the chili powder and salt. Bring the sauce to a boil, then reduce the heat. Add the infused saffron at this point. Cover and cook the chicken for a further 10 minutes. Add the sugar and stir to mix thoroughly.
  6. Before serving, taste to check the seasoning and adjust as necessary.
  7. To serve, garnish with sliced almonds.

Story, photography, and styling by Quelcy Kogel 

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Jamaican Style Ackee and Callaloo Patties

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Four Jamaican Style Ackee sit on a colorful floral tablecloth.

The foodways of British imperialism and 1960s diasporic migration brought the “patty” to New York. One of my grandmothers traveled similar routes, migrating from Jamaica to New York in 1967. Myself a migrant to New York, I was inspired to invent my own Jamaican patty, a vegan one with ackee and callaloo. Extra turmeric and curry powder give it the glow of the Golden Krust chain restaurant that sells patties across the boroughs. Few realize that the gold is turmeric, an Indian spice that arrived in Jamaica from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. And while a patty is not an Indian pastry, it bears a resemblance to a samosa, even though it is more closely related to the English pasty. Cornish pasties were designed for the masses, British miners who needed a contained lunch. The buttery pastry culture of Great Britain converged with Indian spices to make what is now arguably a Black food. I’ve been told its West African cousin can be found in Nigeria, the meat hand pie. To eat a patty is to consume a Black world to which Asian cookery was central.

Thinking of the high-fat content in pastry that served laboring people in the 19th century well, I tried a vegan remix. I substituted butter with coconut oil. Then I filled my patty with the best vegetarian West African–derived comfort foods of Jamaica: ackee and callaloo. Be careful if picking from a tree; like another West African transplant to the Americas — cassava — ackee can be a deadly poison if the skin and the seeds are consumed. Eating ackees before they are ripe leads to the Jamaican vomiting sickness, which has a storied record in the British colonial archive and was part of the arsenal of enslaved Africans. While ackee and callaloo are not always easy to find, replacing them with hardy greens such as kale, spinach, and tomatoes works, too.

Jamaican Style Ackee and Callaloo Patties Recipe

For the filling
1 tbsp coconut oil
1⁄2 cup diced yellow onion
2 large garlic cloves, minced
1⁄8 tsp cinnamon
1⁄4 tsp allspice
1⁄2 tsp cumin
1⁄2 tsp garam masala
1⁄2 tsp ground coriander
1⁄2 tsp turmeric
1⁄4 tsp curry powder
1⁄2 tsp garlic powder
1⁄8 tsp cayenne pepper
1⁄2 tsp pink Himalayan salt, plus more to taste
1⁄2 green chile or Scotch bonnet pepper, seeded and minced, to taste
1⁄2 cup shredded callaloo (if using canned, use 1 cup), or 1 cup hardy greens like kale or spinach
1 (19-oz) can of ackee, or diced tomatoes
Black pepper, to taste
1 tbsp minced fresh thyme

For the pasty:

2 3⁄4 cups unbleached flour
2 tsp turmeric powder
1 tsp curry powder (Caribbean or British brands preferable)
1⁄2 tsp pink Himalayan salt
3⁄4 cup coconut oil, chilled
2 tsp white vinegar
1⁄2 cup cold water
Coconut or vegetable oil for brushing
West Indian hot pepper sauce for serving

To make the filling 

  1. In a medium sauté pan over medium-low heat, combine the oil, onion, and garlic and allow them to sweat and take on a little color, then add the spices, salt, and chile. (As they say in Trinidad, you should parch the spices, cooking them to activate the oils.) Sauté, stirring occasionally, for 8-10 minutes or until the onion and garlic are caramelized.
  2. Stir in the callaloo, reduce the heat to low, cover, and cook for 10-12 minutes or 5-6 minutes for kale or canned callaloo. Add the ackee and cook for an additional 10 minutes; do not over stir. season with additional salt, pepper, and thyme and set aside to allow the flavors to marry.

To make the Pastry

  1. In a large bowl, combine the flour with the turmeric, curry powder, and salt and mix well with your fingers like a rake. Add the oil and mix with your hands until it’s fully incorporated and the mixture feels like fine sand, about 10 minutes.
  2. Combine the vinegar with ½ cup cold water and mix well. Hydration of the dough is important. Then, without overworking the dough, add the vinegar mixture by the tablespoon, while stirring, just until the dough comes away from the sides of the bowl and begins to feel like wet sand on the shore of a beach. Add additional tablespoons of water as needed. Knead the dough and roll into a tight ball. It should look yellow and be hydrated.
  3. Cover with plastic wrap and let rest in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours.

To make the patties

  1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees and remove the dough from the refrigerator. Use the internal fan setting if your oven has one. Wait for the dough to soften at room temperature so that you can roll it with a rolling pin.
  2. Lightly dust a clean surface with flour, roll out the dough until it is about ¹/₈ inch thick. This will require some elbow grease because the vegan crust is not as pliable as a traditional butter pastry crust. Cut 6-inch circles from the dough (you can use a bowl if you don’t have cookie cutters, running a sharp knife around the bowl). Spoon 2 tablespoons of the filling onto the center of one side of each circle, leaving about a ¹/₈-inch border.
  3. Caution: You will be tempted to overstuff; don’t. Fold the other half over to make a semicircle, press to seal, and if you do not have a crimper, a fork works well enough to close the parcel of pastry. Press hard to make an imprint and seal the pastry; you should notice the dough bounce back.
  4. Transfer the patties to a parchment-lined baking sheet, brush with oil, and bake until you see the golden turmeric-spiced crust begin to brown, about 25 minutes. Remove from the oven and let cool for 5 minutes. Jamaican patty shops often feature signs warning that hot patties should be left to cool lest you burn your mouth with the delicious curry filling. Enjoy with hot pepper sauce.
  5. DIASPORA TIP: If you do not have access to callaloo, you can try substituting with spinach or other hardy greens. While there is no substitute for ackee, tomatoes, another fruit miscategorized as a vegetable, work well with greens for the filling.

Story and Recipe by Tao Leigh Goffe, Ph.D. from Black Food: Stories, Art, and Recipes from Across the African Diaspora

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Chocolate Zucchini Bread

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Chocolate Zucchini Bread cut into small pieces on a wooden serving tray. The corners show two plates cut in half with a small piece of bread on each

If we are being honest, this bread is more of a chocolate cake with a bit of zucchini. But hey, at least we’re trying to be more nutritious, right?! So while you sip your coffee in the morning and take a bite of this rich and delicious chocolate zucchini bread, you can feel satisfied knowing that you’re also getting a healthy dosage of vitamin A, manganese, and fiber!

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Chocolate Zucchini Bread cut into small pieces on a wooden serving tray. The corners show two plates cut in half with a small piece of bread on each

Chocolate Zucchini Bread


  • Author: Emily Rapp

Description

A healthier way to indulge in dessert.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 2 zucchinis (you need 2 cups of grated zucchini)
  • 1/3 cup butter
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup dutch process cocoa
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 3/4 tsp kosher salt
  • 2/3 cup dark brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/3 cup buttermilk (whole milk can also work)
  • 1/2 cup dark chocolate chips (optional)


Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F and grease and line your loaf pan with parchment paper.
  2. In a medium-sized bowl, grate zucchini until you have 2 packed cups worth. Transfer the zucchini to a cheesecloth and squeeze the moisture out of it until almost no juice comes out when you squeeze. Set the squeezed and de-juiced zucchini aside.
  3. In a saucepan or in the microwave, melt your butter. Set aside to cool.
  4. In a large bowl add your flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Whisk to combine.
  5. In a clean medium-sized bowl, add the sugars and the melted butter, and whisk to combine completely.
  6. Add the eggs, vanilla, and buttermilk and whisk together until you have a homogeneous liquid mass.
  7. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and whisk until everything is just combined and there are only a couple of streaks of flour left.
  8. Add your zucchini and fold it into the batter using the rubber spatula. Make sure it gets evenly distributed.
  9. Pour your batter into your prepared loaf pan and top with chocolate chips if desired.
  10. Bake in the preheated oven for 40-50 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
  11. Allow to cool before cutting and enjoy!

Recipe, Styling, and Photography by Emily Rapp

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Pittsburgh Happenings: May 9-15

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Lizzo. What's happening in Pittsburgh this week?
Photo by AB+DM

An opera, a plant sale, a book festival, and a visit from a superstar pop queen: no matter your taste, there’s something for you happening this week in Pittsburgh.

Photo by Alex M. Philip

Nana Kwame Adjei Brenyah
Bottlerocket Social Hall, May 12
New York Times-bestselling, author of Friday Black, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, is touring to promote his latest release, Chain-Gang All-Stars, a fictional tale about two women gladiators fighting for freedom in a for-profit private prison. Local author Damon Young joins Adjei-Brenyah during his Pittsburgh stop for a conversation that promises to be riveting and insightful.

Photo courtesy of Nemacolin

Mother’s Day Weekend
Nemacolin, May 12 to 14
Treat your mom. If you’re a mom, treat yourself. From crafts for the little ones to painting dates and wine galore, this weekend is all about mothers and mother figures.

Photo courtesy of Madagascar The Musical

Madagascar the Musical
Benedum Center, May 12
We hope you like to move it, move it! Alex, Marty, Melman, and Gloria have escaped the New York Central Park Zoo and are headed to the Benedum Center stage.

Photo by Erda Estremera

Sewickley May Market
Sewickley, May 13
Are you ready for the fast-approaching garden season? If not (or even if you are), you’re not going to want to miss Sewickley’s May Market. Here, plant enthusiasts will find 50+ vendors offering flowers, garden wares, repurposed items, eco-friendly merchandise, and nature-themed gifts for those last-minute Mother’s Day shoppers.

Photo by AB+DM

Lizzo
PPG Paints Arena, May 13
It’s “About Damn Time” Lizzo visits Pittsburgh! The Grammy-award-winning musician’s “Lizzo: The Special 2our” makes a stop with special guest Latto and, of course, her flute.

Photo by Fang-Wei Lin

Greater Pittsburgh Festival of Books
Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, May 13
After a successful inaugural year, the Greater Pittsburgh Festival of Books returns for a second time, uniting Pittsburgh’s rich literary scene with book lovers and authors alike. Featured speakers include Ross Gay, Rebecca Yarros, Leon Ford, Laura Warrell, and many more.

Photo courtesy of the Pittsburgh Opera

We Shall Not Be Moved
August Wilson African American Cultural Center, May 13 to 21
Co-produced by Opera Philadelphia, The Apollo Theater, and Hackney Empire and developed in partnership with Art Sanctuary, We Shall Not Be Moved, a combination of spoken word, contemporary movement, video projection, classical, R&B, and jazz singing, tells the story of five runaway teens who find themselves living in the exact location where a monumental historic moment took place some 30 years earlier.

Mother’s Day Reservation Round-Up 2023

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an attractive woman holding a cocktail in a restaurant
Photo courtesy of Ritual House

Mother’s Day 2023 is rapidly approaching. In a recent poll of 2000 moms conducted by OnePoll, it found that the one thing moms want most on this special day is your time. A day when they can take a break from being the family super hero, and just relax with those she so lovingly tends to on a regular basis. If you have yet to decide on a plan for the day, why not start by giving mom a break in the kitchen at one of these local restaurants?

 

an appetizer plate of olives, pickles and cheese on a table covered with a colorful tablecloth of red orange and blue

Khalil’s

Sister-owners Dalel and Leila Khalil have designed a Syrian and Mediterranean Brunch to celebrate Mother’s Day. Usually closed on Sundays, the Middle Eastern restaurant will open its doors for the special occasion. The Syrian spread includes a complimentary mimosa for Mom, with Lebanese wines, Mediterranean cocktails and beers also available for purchase. Reservations are required.

Please email reservation information to: info@khalilsrestaurant.com

 

cocktail in a clear glass with a cucumber ribbon and an orchid on a black and white 3d cube print table with more orchids around the glass

Ritual House

Pittsburgh’s newest modern American restaurant features global flavors and artful cocktails in the iconic downtown Pittsburgh Union Trust building. Offering spirited food and drink in an atmosphere designed for the senses, Ritual House is an experience unlike any other in the city. Grab a seat under the eighteen chandeliers suspended over the central bar and pamper Mom with a Spa Day cocktail crafted with cucumber-infused vodka, St. Germain Elderflower Liqueur, fresh lime, and agave coconut water or treat her to a Blushing Bellini with Stoli Peach, white peach puree, peach bitters, and topped with prosecco. Explore the extensive food menu, featuring Weekend Rituals like Croque Madame served with a sunny side egg, mornay sauce, and truffle fries. For something sweet, enjoy the show stopping the Lemon Meringue Pancakes made with lemon curd, glazed pecans, granola, and
topped with fluffy bruleed meringue.

Reservations recommended.

 

latte in a white mug with heart latte art next to a white plate with fruit salad

Square Cafe 

May 9th through May 15th
The colorful and inviting East Liberty Cafe will serve its brunch hits for all Moms and families on Mother’s Day weekend. In addition to the cafe’s staples, guests will be able to order from their weekly specials available from May 9th through May 15th. Cheers to Mom with a Sangria Blanca, crafted with white wine sangria made with grapes, oranges, lemons, limes, strawberries, fresh orange juice, triple sec, and a splash of sparkling water. Or, a Peach Vanilla Iced Oat Latte; iced espresso latte with oat milk, brewed with peach-vanilla syrup, and cinnamon brown sugar.

 

a fried chicken sandwich with white cheese and lettuce and pickles on a white plate

The Commoner

The downtown staple is ready to honor Mom with a legendary brunch with Executive Chef Dave Racicot’s signature brunch menu. Guests can choose from the extensive brunch favorites like the Fried Chicken Sandwich with kimchi, yuzu kosho mayo, mint, and cucumber on a brioche bun or the Malted Waffle, made with strawberry jam, vanilla whipped cream, and pistachio butter. Beautiful brunch cocktails are plentiful at The Commoner and offer the perfect complements for Mother’s Day Brunch. Toast Mom with a large-format style mimosa with the Mimosas for a Bunch served with one bottle of bubbly and the choice of two juices, serving 2-4 guests.

Reservations recommended.

 

a vegetable dish of carrot Spatzle with a yellow sauce and topped with micro greens

EVY Restaurant

Treat mom to brunch from 11am-3pm at EYV. EYV is a vegetable forward restaurant located in Pittsburgh’s Deutschtown Neighborhood. The restaurant focuses on making vegetables the center of the plate with meats and seafood playing a supporting role. Utilizing the bounty of Western Pennsylvania and East Ohio Farms whenever possible is a priority.

Reservations required.

 

a white plate with a vibrant green vegetable puree, white and green asparagus, dill and purple edible flowers

Hyeholde Restaurant

Hyeholde’s rich history and natural beauty have made it a destination for both locals and visitors alike. Treat mom to a meal fit for a queen. Select a Mother’s Day Brunch upstairs, or a brunch buffet in the Round Room. After brunch, enjoy a stroll through the restaurants vegetable garden. Reservations are available from 11am-4pm.

Reservations required. Call (412) 264-3116

 

a white plate of pasta on a brown table

Vallozzi’s Pittsburgh

Family owned and operated for over 50 years, Vallozzi’s uses fresh, quality ingredients, as well as Italian meats and cheeses flown in from Italy every week. Their extensive wine list is one of 19 in the state of Pennsylvania to receive the Wine Spectator’s Best of Award of Excellence and features an extensive collection of Italian and Domestic wines. Treat mom to a memorable Mother’s Day anytime between 12-6pm on Sunday, May 14. The menu includes Smoked Salmon Frittata, Steak and Eggs, and Beef Short Ribs as well as a variety of handmade pasta dishes, like the Pappardelle Bolognese, and tasty starters.

Reservations required. Call 412-394-3400 or find them on Opentable.

 

STORY BY STAR LALIBERTE / PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF CORRESPONDING RESTAURANT

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