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EatingWell: Everything you love about stuffed peppers, made easier
You won’t be stuffing any peppers for this stuffed pepper casserole, but you will be enjoying the sweet and smoky combination of flavors coming from bell peppers, fire-roasted tomatoes, smoked paprika and ground beef. You can use precooked rice from the package or leftover brown rice if you have it. If using leftover rice, you will need about ...Read more
Environmental Nutrition: What’s the deal with gluten-free diets?
A gluten-free diet excludes all forms of gluten, a protein naturally found in wheat, barley and rye. While gluten poses no harm to most people, for individuals with certain health conditions, avoiding it is essential for maintaining well-being and preventing serious complications.
The primary group who must follow a gluten-free diet are those ...Read more
Seriously Simple: Mocha mousse, a Seriously Simple Valentine’s Day dessert
The highlight of freezing February is Valentine’s Day. Not for going out to lunch or dinner, where the big crowds rival Mother’s Day meal service. For me, it’s all about the meal I prepare at home. I try to cook up a simple steak, veal chop or fish filet with a vegetable side so I have room to enjoy this luxuriously decadent mousse.
This ...Read more
JeanMarie Brownson: A vegetable-forward bowl so satisfying you won’t miss the meat
A roasted carrot and barley dish at Kinross Winery in New Zealand made skipping steak easy. We photographed it before enjoying to remember its inspiring composition.
Creamy barley, rich from vegetable broth and garlic, not cream, filled a ceramic bowl. Perfectly roasted carrot segments stood on end in the barley, while tahini, spiced crumbled ...Read more
The Kitchn: This legendary dip is a game-day classic for a reason
As far as classic party dips go, seven-layer dip ranks among the very best. Carefully composed and colorfully striped, it’s no wonder this dip is a key player on the ...Read more
The Kitchn: The secret to impossibly fluffy Southern biscuits
Southern biscuits are the perfect fictional device for telling the narratives of Southern families. One cook makes his biscuits with White Lily flour only because that’s how his Maw Mae did it. Another homeandleisure/recipes/varietymenu/s-3986484">Read more
Gretchen's table: Warm winter's chill with a hot bowl of this tangy and traditional Mexican stew
Grocery stores might try to convince you otherwise, but it's pretty tough to get a decent tomato in Western Pennsylvania in January.
The plump red fruit — preferably homegrown or sourced locally at your favorite farmers market — is at its juicy prime in late summer, forcing tomato lovers either to eat their fill before falls rolls around, ...Read more
Fresh find: Gluten-free waffles or pancakes from a box
Woe to the cookie, cake or waffle lover who discovers, often after years of stomach upset, fatigue and skin issues, that the culprit of their health issues is gluten, the protein found in grains like wheat, barley and rye.
Most everything you find in a bakery, grocery store cookie aisle or on the sweet side of a breakfast menu is made with ...Read more
For Dry January, hospitality industry experts discuss why they're cutting back on alcohol
CHICAGO — This time of year, with Dry January in full swing, it’s hard to ignore the sobering (pun intended) stories and stats on alcohol consumption. According to a 2025 Gallup poll, a record-low 54% of Americans reported that they consume alcohol. It was the third consecutive year the poll found declines in Americans’ reported drinking. ...Read more
5 simple dinners to ease back into cooking in the new year
PITTSBURGH — Still suffering from a post-holiday drag? After the fun of Christmas and New Year's, it's completely understandable if you're having a hard time snapping back into a routine.
The fact that it's still getting light too late and dark too early — we won't set our clocks forward for spring until March 8 — only adds to the funk ...Read more
The most exciting restaurants opening across the US
Get ready to step up to the counter for some of the year’s more anticipated cooking.
If there’s one restaurant trend to get excited about, it’s pedigreed chefs reinventing the concept of walk-up counters where customers order, then seat themselves. It’s an efficient model that allows operators to trim labor costs while featuring fine-...Read more
EatingWell: These fajitas are so tasty you won’t even miss the meat!
This tasty fajita dinner is vegetarian-friendly and is easily doubled to feed a crowd. The fajitas are mild and tender with a little bit of char from the broiler. The colorful toppings add freshness and texture, and crumbled queso fresco adds tangy flavor to each bite.
Sheet-Pan Sweet Potato Fajitas
Serves 4
Active Time: 20 minutes
Total ...Read more
Environmental Nutrition: Make your diet less inflammatory
Q: How can I make my diet less inflammatory?
A: While there isn’t one specific anti-inflammatory diet, experts say overall healthy eating patterns may reduce inflammation. To make your diet less inflammatory, focus on whole, nutrient-dense foods and reduce pro-inflammatory foods. Here are a few steps to try.
More anti-inflammatory ...Read more
Savory scones are quick, easy and delicious
Bread easily bests all other foods as the ultimate comfort nosh. Not just any bread, however. Something hearty, grain-filled, and homemade if possible. Warm, no matter what.
Cold January days welcome the warmth of the oven. Coming in from outside, a home that smells like fresh-baked goods always comforts. Plus, there’s no better accompaniment...Read more
The Kitchn: My entire family devours these chicken bites in minutes
If you’re looking for a guaranteed quick dinner win, stop scrolling now. My hot honey chicken bites have it all, and there’s no better way to ...Read more
Seriously Simple: Enjoy a satisfying start to your meal on a cold day
When it’s cold outside this soup satisfies my wish for comfort in a bowl. Easy to put together, this bright orange puree has lots of interesting flavor notes.
Roasting the squash brings out its inherent sweetness by lightly caramelizing it. (Once you roast squash you may never cook it any other way.) Use a sheet pan that has been lined with ...Read more
The Kitchn: This Ritz cracker hack is so good
Anytime someone throws an outrageous number in front of food, I’m intrigued. I mean, have you tried a 100 Grand Bar? Perfection. Or our million-dollar spaghetti? Even better.
So when I saw a video of chocolaty “billion-dollar Ritz” (yes, that�...Read more
Nonalcoholic options are making Dry January more 'beerable'
ORLANDO, Fla. — At the start of 2025, a study by The Beer Institute revealed that 60 percent of Americans saw nonalcoholic beer as a viable alternative for long-term moderation.
But what about just for one month?
For many of us, Dry January has begun, though people do it for different reasons.
Some see the 30 days as a dependency test to ...Read more
Do we really have to teach young adults how to hand-wash dishes?
I couldn't believe it.
Then my wife showed me the story right there in the newspaper. And I still can't believe it.
I used to work for the New York Times, by which I mean I delivered their Sunday newspapers for a few months when I was young. But I still feel a connection to them — and I assume they have equally warm thoughts of me. So I tend...Read more
5 tips -- and dishes -- to get your new year off to a healthy start
A new year is often challenging. Despite knowing we should throw out old, bad habits along with the New Year's Eve party favors, change is hard.
Many of us eat more than we should. Yet nothing changes for the better — especially in terms of health — when we keep eating those bad-for-us-but-tasty processed junk foods that are high in sugar, ...Read more








