“Why don’t you just cook something that tastes really
good?” Julia Reed’s mother said that, chiding her daughter, a writer of
uncommon style and wit who used to contribute food essays and recipes to
The New York Times Magazine, for spending too much time thinking about
complicated, over-the-top recipes at the expense of simple, honest
American cooking that draws compliments not because it looks amazing,
but because it’s delicious. Like, for example, this recipe, for what
Julia called in a 2002 article, “the best squash casserole on the planet
Earth.” The ingredients are by no means fancy – summer squash,
jalapeno, white bread, Ritz crackers, eggs and Cheddar cheese – but they
combine in mysterious and marvelous ways to deliver a perfect
accompaniment to a grilled chicken or weekend roast.
0 comments:
Post a Comment