Dorie Greenspan has three cakes, two sweet and one savory, that are perfect for a baking project.
 | | David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Hadas Smirnoff |
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What to Cook This Weekend |
Good morning. Dorie Greenspan returned to The Times this week with a paean to the joys of kitchen cakes — simple, largely unadorned cakes meant to be stored on a counter and snacked on at will. In a season that's filled with fancy (check out Yotam Ottolenghi's kumquat and chocolate yule log), kitchen cakes are a satisfying, unfussy balm and a great baking project for the weekend. |
What else to cook this weekend? Hanukkah gets underway on Sunday evening, so you might want to cook a brisket in sweet-and-sour sauce on Saturday. That will give it enough time to cure to perfection in the refrigerator for the following night, to eat with latkes and jelly doughnuts for dessert. |
I want to cook without a recipe, too, with a riff on my pal Derr's barbecued shell-on shrimp: a full half-pound per person, tossed with some watered-down barbecue sauce, seared on the grill or under the broiler, and then served with steamed artichoke and lemon butter. Finger food! So delicious. |
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Now, it's nothing to do with spatchcocking chickens or baking a gingerbread bûche de Noël, but the actress Molly Ringwald has a delightful personal history in The New Yorker this week, about working with Jean-Luc Godard in 1986, when she had "just graduated high school — both in real life and in the films of John Hughes." It's charming. |
"Three Pines," on Amazon Prime, is based on Louise Penny's novels about Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Sûreté du Québec police force. The books are a little cozier, and sometimes darker, but Alfred Molina, as Gamache, is wonderful to watch. |
Colin Burrow is in The London Review of Books with a smart takedown on Roald Dahl — "his key skill was his ability to repress nastiness while keeping it visible" — that's well worth reading. |
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