
Molecular gastronomy doesn’t exist. That’s the biggest lie out there in terms of cooking. Or so claims Ferran Adrià, who's known as the father of molecular gastronomy. I've always thought it was an odd term, but in this case I've been going with the flow.
Megnut is a site about food written by Meg Hourihan. She lives in NYC. More...
Summer drinks should be like summer evenings: long, light and cool. Guest writer A.D. introduces some less common ones to enliven our senses during these wonderful long hot days.
Food traditions bind my family; I'm reminded of that every year when I drive to north-central Massachusetts to pick strawberries with my grandparents.
My mother swears by frozen fish. I was unconvinced, and decided to put her statements to the test: could flash-frozen fish taste as good as fresh local fish from the Greenmarket or even fresh fish from a local supermarket?
I was also writing about:
Common cravings in people with pica include the urge to eat soil, coal, rust, chalk and paper
Do we really need a different glass for every spirit and wine?
Do's and don'ts of cooking food for your baby
If you think you don’t like pumpkin pie, you are wrong
Coconut Jewel Cupcakes by chotda on Flickr
Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page are doing a book-signing and wine tasting tonight
Because I've been sick, I didn't make it to Ruhlman's talk at the Y
It's time to move on and let Rachael be Rachael
University attempts to close the gastronomic fracture that is splitting France
Watch the 'Hands of the Sun' in action