The best of Shanghai's street food, the golden rules of bagel perfection, and your guide to summer wine pairing. See what you missed this week on Serious Eats. Read More
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Memorial Day fun has ended, and so has the shortened workweek (or extended vacation, depending on your plans). Time to get back into gear with a full week’s worth of recipes you’ll love—fit for summer, but also just plain delicious. Every Sunday, we publish a week of Cooking Light dinner plans filled with our favorite recipes—both from current issues and classics. Each meal is designed to be ready and on the table in 45 minutes or less, the perfect solution for when work and day camp schedules leave little time for cooking.
If you like having a healthy meal plan but want something customized to your dietary or caloric needs, check out The Cooking Light Diet. It’s a calorie-driven weekly meal plan—breakfast, lunch, snacks, and dinner—based on your dieting goals and food preferences.
The Game Plan:
Monday: Penne with Asparagus, Pistachios, and Mint with Spinach Salad with Berries and Goat Cheese
Tuesday: Mustard-Glazed Salmon with Buttery Lentils with Shallots with Olive-Almond Green Beans
Wednesday: Pork Tenderloin with Roasted Cherries and Shallots with Cabbage Slaw
Thursday: Chicken with Quick Chile Verde with Bell Pepper and Corn Sauté
Friday: Ginger-Scented Corn and Asparagus Stir-Fry
Dessert Bonus: Peanut Butter and Dark Chocolate Fudge
Monday: This 25-minute Penne with Asparagus, Pistachios, and Mint main has the kind of green on green (on green) we love—fresh asparagus, rich, nutty pistachios, and herbaceous mint. Whole-grain penne is an added healthy bonus. Serve with a quick, colorful Spinach Salad with Berries and Goat Cheese.
Penne with Asparagus, Pistachios, and Mint
Spinach Salad with Berries and Goat Cheese
Tuesday: Lentils may just be the most underrated members of the legume family—they’re inexpensive, quick, and become a luscious side when sautéed with butter and shallots. Mustard-Glazed Salmon with Buttery Lentils with Shallots is weeknight fast, but impressive enough for company. Serve with crisp-tender Olive-Almond Green Beans.
Mustard-Glazed Salmon with Buttery Lentils with Shallots
Wednesday: Use any remaining shallots from last night’s lentils for the simple, delicious Pork Tenderloin with Roasted Cherries and Shallots. Cherries and pork pair beautifully, and hit of balsamic vinegar really makes the dish sing. Pair with a simply dressed Cabbage Slaw.
Pork Tenderloin with Roasted Cherries and Shallots
Thursday: You won’t believe how easy it is to make your own quick verde sauce from scratch in this Chicken with Quick Chile Verde—it’ll be ready right when the chicken finishes cooking. The salsa would also be great spooned over fish tacos or simply steamed rice. Serve with a Bell Pepper and Corn Sauté, ready in minutes.
Chicken with Quick Chile Verde
Friday: Time to use up all the produce remainders in your fridge. Ginger-Scented Corn and Asparagus Stir-Fry uses the asparagus, corn, and red bell pepper from during the week, though you could use any produce you like. Serve with simply steamed white or brown rice.
Ginger-Scented Corn and Asparagus Stir-Fry
Dessert Bonus: If a peanut butter cup and a piece of fudge fell in love, this would be the perfect result. Peanut Butter and Dark Chocolate Fudge gets deep chocolate flavor from unsweetened dark cocoa and a little instant coffee. Chopped peanuts on top add crunch. Happy Friday indeed!
Peanut Butter and Dark Chocolate Fudge
Ready to start shopping? View this week’s menu, which includes every dinner recipe you see mentioned here. From there, you can add all the ingredients to your shopping list in one click when you sign into your MyRecipes account.
Grilling can be healthy, depending on what you’re grilling, says Rocky Stubblefield, of Stubbs Bar-B-Q in Austin, Texas. In this video he explains why grilling is healthy and reveals his favorite vegetable to grill.
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May is the launch of Seriously, Celiac Disease, a campaign that encourages the importance of getting tested for celiac disease and having conversations with family members about this hereditary condition. We talked with Jillian Lagasse, Celiac Disease Awareness Hero and daughter of celebrity chef Emeril Lagasse, about her experience and why getting educated about Celiac is so important.
Lagasse was ill for most of her life. But no one could figure out what was wrong. There was only misdiagnosis after misdiagnosis. One doctor even advised that she could be allergic to bananas and carrots.
After moving to London, the first doctor she saw suspected Celiac within her first meeting with him. Blood tests confirmed the diagnosis, and it all clicked. “I never thought what I was eating was what was essentially kind of killing me,” Lagasse says. “When you have digestive issues, a lot of times what you reach for is a piece of toast or saltines. My whole life, that’s what I was doing, and I was just hurting my body more and more.”
Within the two weeks following, her energy was back, the digestive issues went away, her rashes disappeared and her hair grew back. “It was, for me, a game changer,” she says. “It really saved my health and my life.”
She looked to the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness as a fountain of information to answer questions like What exactly is Celiac? How do I handle it? What can I eat?
It’s a resource that encouraged Lagasse to talk with her family. Alice Bast, founder of the NFCA, explained that Celiac disease is a serious genetic autoimmune disease, meaning it’s hereditary and comes from someone in the family.
Lagasse’s goal this year is to have conversations with the NFCA’s Talk, Tell, Test approach with each of her family members. More so on her mom’s side, because Emeril has already been tested. “He was like, it’s probably not me,” she laughs. “That would have been a real problem for him.”
All the women on her mom’s side have had digestive issues and various symptoms. But the conversation would mean a drastic change. “My mom’s family is Portuguese,” she says. “[In their family,] you only go to the doctor if you’re bleeding from your limbs or like that Monty Python skit where your blood is just shooting out.”
Lagasse wants to change the mindset around health.
There’s a stubbornness of “Well, I don’t think I have it. I just think I have stomach aches every now and then.” But with this NFCA approach, she feels empowered to talk with others about their overall health and future.
Lagasse talks about how much easier it is to eat with Celiac now, mentioning that even frozen pizza comes in a gluten-free variety. With the influx of conversations around gluten these days, she’s glad that people know what gluten even is, but it’s also difficult, when you can turn on the television without hearing jokes about eating gluten-free.
“I do think it has that stigma that it’s just a diet,” she says. “But the reality is that it is the only cure for a very serious illness.” There’s still a lot of work that Lagasse feels needs to be done to define the lines between what people know as living gluten-free by choice and having Celiac Disease.
Find out more here, and join the discussion.
Nearly all store-bought dressings list water as the first ingredient. This may sound like a calorie-saver, but what it actually does is cause all that diluted dressing to drip off the leaves, leaving you with soggy greens and a bunch of flavor in the bottom of the bowl. And store-bought dressings aren’t cheap, either, considering you end up paying mostly for a bottle full of water, salt, and sugar.
Enter our quick vinaigrette: easy, cheap, and healthy. We like a sturdy base: three parts oil to one part acid (citrus juice or vinegar), seasoned with salt, herbs, and spices. It’s the perfect formula, allowing a thin coating of flavorful, heart-healthy oil to cling to the leaves. You’ll need less, too—about half as much—costing only about $0.20 per serving.
RED WINE VINAIGRETTE
Try this vinaigrette on our Peaches and Green Salad.
3 tablespoons olive oil + 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar + ¼ teaspoon salt + ¼ teaspoon black pepper + 2 teaspoons minced shallots
Combine all ingredients in a jar; shake well.
SERVES 4 (serving size: 1 tablespoon)
CALORIES 92; FAT 10.1g (sat 1.4g, mono 7.4g, poly 1.1g); PROTEIN 0g; CARB 0g; FIBER 0g; CHOL 0mg; IRON 0mg; SODIUM 146mg; CALC 2mg
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Each year, as my calendar nears May, June, and July, my mailbox fills up with beautiful wedding invitations—and with them, the need to buy great gifts to help the new couples start their first homes together. Because of my job as market editor for this magazine, I’m often asked what couples should include on their registry. I also have the habit (good or bad, you decide) of buying wedding gifts I know people will love if only they knew to register for them. Here, 5 of my favorite new pans, appliances, and gizmos I’d recommend to any young (or more mature) couple looking to start a great new home kitchen.
If the couple is starting their first home, they probably don’t have any great pots and pans yet. All-Clad is the quintessential favorite, but the price tag prevents a lot of people from contributing to the collection. I prefer to gift a high-quality, median-price set of pans, such as Anolon. A 12-piece set of the brand’s Authority Hard-Anodized Nonstick 12-Piece Cookware is only $400. You can also buy individual pieces, which start at $30.
We named Cuisinart’s Velocity Ultra our best blender for your buck, but it’s also a great gift. Couples need to whirr together margaritas, daiquiris, and lots of other concoctions for entertaining or nights at home. Also, you can help unsuspecting grooms avoid the blender blunder à la “Father of the Bride.” At just $100, you could even throw in a favorite cookbook or a smoothie manual.
Keurig’s newest brewing system, the K250, can brew one-cup or fill a four-cup carafe. This is a great perk for a small household–the quantity isn’t overwhelming or wasteful. Plus, the K250 comes in 5 very trendy colors, as well as black and white. It doesn’t claim a lot of countertop real estate either, so for $120, it makes a very thoughtful, practical gift.
I gave a 10-piece Simply Store Set from Pyrex ($30) to a friend a few years ago, and she later told me she was convinced it saved her marriage. We’ve all been there–you’ve cooked and eaten a delicious meal, and now you need to store it. But all you can find are mismatched carry-out containers of questionable age. Stock the couple’s cabinets with reusable, dependable Pyrex, and you’ll help ensure marital bliss for years to come.
Equally important to having good storage is having great serving pieces. Corningware is an iconic favorite. Their French White 7-piece Casserole Set is a great starter collection. This was actually one of my first house-warming gifts when I moved into my home, so I know how handy these can be. For that reason, I’ve been gifting it to friends for their big day. Of course, I’m sure to include a great cookbook along with it so they have dishes to prepare in their new serving pieces.