Wednesday, July 18, 2018

As The Heat Turns Up, The Reds Cool Down: Your Guide to Drinking Red Wine This Summer

Poor wine. Beloved as you are, you never can seem to completely shake the nagging stereotype that you’re a bit complicated, bound by rules and guidelines that lead people to find you intimidating and inaccessible. Pair this wine with that dish; Drink this in one season, and that another; Serve these bottles chilled and those at room temp.

While I’m not here to tell you to throw the whole guidebook out the window, I will say, if you’ll allow another cliché, that when it comes to wine, some rules are indeed meant to be broken. So go ahead: drink Champagne with your entrée (and honestly, really just as much as possible); enjoy rosé all year long; pop a couple bottles of red in the cooler at your next barbecue. That’s right, summer is finally here again and we want you to light up the grill and chill out with some cool red wine.

A Couple Things to Keep in Mind

Reluctant as I am to underscore that thing I just said about guidelines and stereotypes, there are some things you’ll want to consider when it comes to shopping for a good summer red.

How Chilling Affects Structure. Contradictory though it may seem, dropping the temp of a bottle (not too much of course; more on that in a minute) actually turns up the volume on several elements of the wine’s structure. Lighter-bodied, high-acid reds are going to taste even more refreshing, as the cooler temperature emphasizes brightness and acidity. Fruit aromas and flavors will also be dialed up, making it fun to play with more fruit-forward selections. (And no, not sweet. Think juicy fruit flavor without the actual literal sugar content.) Just be mindful that the astringent, dry-in-the-mouth thing that tannins bring to the table will also be more pronounced and can quickly overwhelm everything on the table.

It’s All About the (Low) Alcohol. When in doubt, look for a red between 12% and 13% (mayyyyybe 13.5%) ABV. By and large, reds in this alcohol range will have the ideal structural elements you’re looking for in a chillable bottle.

Be Chill But Not Too Chill. Overcooling a wine—whether it be red, white, or rosé—is basically equivalent to putting it on mute. It’s not a High Life, you don’t want it to be chug-perfect ice cold. For reds, you’re going to want something in the 50-55 degree range. So, go ahead and stick it in the cooler, just don’t forget about it for longer than 15 to 20 minutes.

Consider Production Method. This will likely take a little research or require a chat with a knowledgeable store clerk, but it’s worthwhile to consider how the wine is made. Wines that undergo carbonic maceration (a fermentation process that emphasizes freshness and fruit in the finished product) are ideal candidates for a little chill. Beaujolais is the classic example of wines often made using this method, though a lot of new-minded producers in California are experimenting with the style (Kivelstadt Cellar’s “KC Lab” Zinfandel and Stolpman’s Carbonic Zinfandel come to mind). Reds that are fermented and aged in neutral vessels like stainless steel and concrete will more likely be of the fresh, easy, ready-to-drink variety, which is ideal for summer. Kyle Jeffrey, a young winemaker and sales rep for the Revel portfolio in Southern California, calls out Steve Matthiasson’s Tendu red as another example of a wine that relies on production technique to aid quaffability.

“A blend of Aglianico and Montepulciano, it’s an awesome no-SO2 option that is fermented at cool temperatures allowing for less extraction of tannin,” he says.

Ok, But Specifically, What Am I Looking For?

We tapped a couple industry experts to talk us through what to look for in terms of grapes, regions, and bottles.

Pinot Noir

Specifically when sourced from cool-climate regions of France, California’s Sonoma Coast, or Oregon, it’s a pretty fail-safe candidate. While the grape may not be the first thing that comes to mind when people think of Sancerre, the prized Loire Valley region makes some incredibly compelling Pinot (Lucien Crochet and Gitton Père et Fils are two favorite producers). Bright and fresh with a tart red berry juiciness, these wines tend to have a unique maritime quality and slight pepper-spice note that makes them a dynamite match with whole grilled fish. Get our Campfire Trout with Herbs and Bacon recipe.

Chowhound

They may rank among the best wines in the world, but red Burgundy—okay, Burgundy in general—usually falls at a fairly restrictive price point (and that’s kind of not the point of a backyard barbecue/porch red, amiright?). Still, if you have your heart set on it, there are great values to be found at the regional level, aka Bourgogne Rouge, meaning that the fruit can be sourced from throughout the whole of Burgundy as opposed to a specific village or vineyard.

Gamay

Of course, if you’re looking in the Burgundy region, you might as well just divert your attention a little south to Beaujolais, whose Gamay-based reds are arguably the OG of chillable red wines. While bottles from one of the region’s ten “crus” represent the highest quality, recent “It” status as an industry darling has price tags consistently creeping up. Allison Whittinghill, a sommelier and general manager at New Orleans natural wine restaurant Bar Frances, recommends Lapierre’s “Les Raisins Gaulois,” the entry-level, young-vine bottling from the children of one of the region’s most celebrated winemakers.

“From Marcel’s kids to God’s ears…this is a glou-glou wine that delivers,” she praises. “It has the fruit and juiciness and structure that I now come to see as Beaujolais. A low-alcohol, toss-back Gamay with a purpose, perfect for the day-drinker. Pass the cheese and charcuterie please, thanks.”

Throwing it back to the Loire for a minute, Whittinghill points out that the region also produces some tasty barbecue-friendly Gamay. Her favorite at the moment is Olivier Lasson’s “Gama Sutra”, made under his Les Vins Contés label.

“It’s definitely meaty, with a slightly bigger body and more structure for those who don’t want to go super-light. Good for an afternoon when the storms roll in early and you have leftover brisket in the fridge.” Get our Easy Slow Cooker BBQ Beef Brisket recipe.

Chowhound

Blaufränkisch

Alex Alvarez, Advanced Sommelier and wine director at San Francisco’s Cotogna, also has meat on the brain when it comes to picking his favorite summer reds. Among them is the staple Austrian varietal Blaufränkisch, which he describes as smelling like a cross between Cab Franc and Syrah: “It’s meaty and peppery and just crammed with juicy tart red and black fruits. A case of it should be included free with every Weber grill sold at Home Depot.”

Two of his favorite bottles at the moment are Moric’s more serious “midweight, spicy, refreshing” 2014 entry level bottling, and one from Hungarian producer Pfneisl.

“This is light and juicy and quaffable, a red for vegetables and fish, but still with a hint of the muddy Blau earthiness. And it’s like $15 for a litre of wine. What’s more summery than that?’

Schiava (aka St. Magdalener)

Both Alvarez and Whittinghill recommend this lesser-known grape from northern Italy’s German-speaking Alto Adige region.

“It can be a difficult grape,” Alvarez cautions. “There’s a lot of Schiava out there and most of it is pleasant enough but pretty anonymous and lacking in real character. But, every once in awhile you come across one that makes you wonder why you’d want to drink anything else. These are light bodied, fruit-driven reds with just enough tea leaf and orange peel complexity to keep you interested. Plus it works with just about anything that would land on a summer table, from tomatoes in salad to sausages on the grill.” Get our Herbed Heirloom Tomato Salad recipe.

Chowhound

For him, one of those stop-you-in-your-tracks bottles is Franz Gojer’s 2015 St. Magdalener Classico: “Light and soft with what smells like every red fruit under the sun (pomegranates! cherries! strawberries!) and an herbaceous edge.”

Whittinghill’s go-to is from winemaker Elena Walch: “They’re always solid. Tons of red fruit and mineral notes and that classic smokiness at the back end that lends to structure and begs for a chill, el pastor tacos, and a front porch.” Get our Tacos el Pastor recipe.

Chowhound

Lambrusco

And while we’re on the subject of Italy, we would be remiss to overlook Emilia-Romagna’s iconic cold red fizz: Lambrusco. Jeffrey would vouch for a number of northern Italian reds as great summer drinking options (“Novaia’s Corvina from Valpolicella is cheap and delicious“), he notes that a Lambrusco works beautifully throughout the season. Despite its typically inky color and dark berry flavor, the wine’s bubbly effervescence makes it feel like more a natural fit in the fridge (not to mention, a natural partner to charcuterie). It’s worth mentioning also that not all Lambruscos match this classic description. It all depends on the type of Lambrusco grape used. Those made from the Sorbrara variety produce a wine that is much lighter, rosé-tinted with a tangy, raspberry sour beer quality.

Remember What We Said About Rules and How They’re Meant To Be Broken?

While the above mentioned tenets stand, that doesn’t mean there can’t be exceptions. For the tannin-loving and fuller-bodied summer red drinkers, Alvarez has two different, unexpected suggestions. For the former, he points towards Nebbiolo.

“Yeah, the same Nebbiolo as in high-tannin, high-alcohol, needs-ten-years-in-the-bottle Barolo. But if you look to the Langhe hills, you’ll find some Nebbiolo-based reds that are absolutely perfect for an outdoor midsummer meal.”

Try the 2012 Caves Cooperatives de Donnas Nebbiolo from the Vallée d’Aosta: “tart red fruit, flowers, and tobacco without the bass-y tar aromas and tough tannic structure of Barolo or Barbaresco.”

And what if you want a red with more punch?

“Syrah gets a bad rap. Most people think of it as an inky, alcoholic clunker of a wine best reserved for cold nights in a pot with braised meat. And they’re not all wrong. There are plenty of Syrahs—especially American and Australian—that taste like you’re being force fed concord grape jelly through a rubber inner-tube. But the best examples, from France’s northern Rhône Valley and from more forward-thinking domestic producers, can be sublime: floral yet savory, intense yet ethereal in a much lighter package (comparatively) than you might expect. The ideal burger grape.”

He recommends Cruse Wine Co.’s 2014 Sonoma County Syrah and Jean-Louis Chave’s 2014 “Offerus” Saint-Joseph.

Get our Bull-Market Burger recipe.

Chowhound

Related Video: What to Do with Half a Bottle of Red Wine



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Celebrate Christmas in July with These Festive Recipes

It’s mid-July and a lot of us are just plain sick of summer. Just one step into the scorching humidity and we instantly melt into gross puddles of sweat. Give us air conditioning or give us death! Or better yet, give us Christmas! If you’re clamoring to skip a few months ahead to the holidays, let us help. The farmers markets may not be boasting a bounty of cranberries or chestnuts just yet, but trust us, there are still plenty of ways to incorporate winter flavors into your summer kitchen. So get ready to deck the palm trees with tinsel and blast some Mariah as you cook up a storm and beat the heat with these oh-so-cool holiday treats.

Frozen Hot Chocolate

You don’t have to go to New York’s Serendipity to get your hand on this famous drink. Plus, it’s way more affordable to make it yourself. The bev is rich, creamy, and evocative of cozy December nights, yet it’s still chill enough to chase away the summertime sweats. Check out this Frozen Hot Chocolate recipe.

Peppermint and Eggnog Ice Cream

Barefeet in the Kitchen

Since everyone’s pigging out on ice cream to cool down, why not take it a step further by making a flavor even more reminiscent of the cold weather months. In other words, break out the leftover candy canes! Trust us, they can still be of use once July rolls around. We’re partial to this Peppermint Ice Cream recipe, but you could also try making eggnog ice cream or even gingerbread ice cream if you’re craving something with a little more spice.

Grilled Turkey and Ham

Butterball

Sure, turkey is the holiday entree of choice, but you can give it a summer-y twist by throwing it on the grill. We swear this a real thing you can do and not a made-up concept we invented to excuse us from ever-eating hot dogs again. In fact, the fine folks at Butterball have an entire guide for how to cook a turkey using this outdoor method. They break down the basics for using both gas and charcoal grills, so you can gobble down on this Thanksgiving bird all throughout the year.

No-Bake Coconut Snowmen

What She Ate

Coconut shavings are a multi-faceted ingredient. It has a tropical taste that will transport you to the beach, but in an ironic twist, it also looks like snow! These no-bake coconut treats utilize these seemingly incongruous properties to delightful effect, especially if made in the summer. Learn how to make them with this White Chocolate Coconut Snowman recipe.

Hula Gingerbread Men 

My Lilikoi Kitchen

If you are brave enough to turn on the oven in 90-degree weather, you might as well make some classic gingerbread men. But when it comes time to decorate, give them a summery edge. Add a hula skirt or bikini top with the power of sprinkles and frosting! If you’re looking for inspiration, this Hawaiian Style Gingerbread Men cookie recipe will have you saying “Mele Kalikimaka” all year long. Or you can put Santa in some swim trunks with this sugar cookie and royal icing recipe.



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9 Orzo Recipes That Make Perfect Picnic Dishes

When you’re packing a picnic, the last thing you want to take along is something that needs refrigeration or to be microwaved before you enjoy it. Pasta salads are a perfect choice because you can easily vary the ingredients to suit your tastes, and serve them at room temperature—and orzo is a nice change of pace from the usual bow ties and shells. Ideal for an impromptu gathering, make a double batch of pasta salad and you can vary the add-ins (meat, cheese, vegetables) and have a delicious base for a meal all week long, that’s just as good eaten al fresco as inside your cubicle for a quick, healthy lunch.

Mediterranean Pasta Salad

Work It! Mom

A Mediterranean take on pasta salad, this orzo is cooked in chicken broth for added flavor and is seasoned with fresh basil and parsley. Add chopped onion, garlic, and tomatoes and you have a perfect Greek pasta salad. Get the recipe.

Celery and Olive Orzo Salad

Celery and Olive Orzo Salad

Chowhound

Crunchy celery, briny olives, and fresh herbs make this a lively choice for a picnic, or for a weeknight dinner. Get our Celery and Olive Orzo Salad recipe.

Mediterranean Tuna Orzo Salad

Mediterranean Tuna Orzo Salad

Chelsea’s Messy Apron

Another Mediterranean take on pasta salad, this one adds oil-packed Italian tuna, roasted red peppers, cucumbers, and olives, all in a lemony oregano and garlic dressing. Get the recipe.

Tri-Colore Orzo

Food Network

The tri-colore in this orzo recipe comes not from the pasta but from the green arugula and basil, the red cherry tomatoes, and the white crumbled ricotta salata. Be sure to let the pasta cool before mixing or the cheese will melt. Get the recipe.

Out of This World Orzo Salad

Panning the Globe

A full head of chopped radicchio is the base for this salad, with toasted pine nuts, Kalamata olives, sun-dried tomatoes, arugula, basil, and parmesan. You can substitute whatever fresh herbs you have in the garden and don’t skimp on the garlic. The orzo salad is best served at room temperature and the flavors meld beautifully in the refrigerator if kept overnight. Get the recipe.

Spinach and Orzo Salad

Aggies Kitchen

More salad than orzo, this combination of baby spinach, dried cranberries, almonds, blue cheese, and spices is a refreshing take on pasta salad. Packed with greens and easy to toss in a Tupperware, this is an ideal picnic addition. Get the recipe.

Lemony Orzo Pasta Salad

Two of a Kind

Crispy bacon pieces and a dressing made of lemon juice, olive oil, and a touch of honey for sweetness really pairs well with the salty Kalamata olives. Top with fresh parsley and you’ve got a great pasta salad recipe that walks the savory/sweet line with ease. Get the recipe.

Orzo Salad with Chickpeas, Cucumbers, Lemon and Dill

Two Peas and Their Pod

Chickpeas and a tangy dressing differentiate this recipe from the pack. Fresh dill, chopped red onion, feta, cucumber, garlic, lemon juice, and olive oil are tossed together for a healthy side dish. The quantities are easy to scale up in this recipe so it’s a great choice to cook for a crowd. Get the recipe.

Orzo with Roasted Vegetables

Picky Cook

Ina Garten’s adaptation includes a fantastic dressing made of lemon juice, olive oil, salt and pepper that you combine with roasted eggplant, bell peppers, garlic, and red onion. This keeps for days in the fridge and is a great accompaniment to grilled meat or vegetable kebabs. Get the recipe.

Lemon Orzo Pasta with Brussels Sprouts

Love and Light Kitchen

It’s rare that you find a recipe that tastes even better the next day, but this lemon orzo pasta with Brussels sprouts is a great recipe to make the night before. Garlic, red pepper, white wine, lemon juice, and capers are sautéed together and make a luscious sauce for the orzo. Get the recipe.

Orzo Salad with Tomatoes and Pine Nuts

Orzo Salad with Tomatoes and Pine Nuts

Chowhound

This is a fast side dish you can make with a can of artichokes, any fresh herbs, and some staple items you already have in your pantry. Garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, and salt make a simple vinaigrette and feel free to add in some artichokes, feta cheese, or olives. Get our Orzo Salad with Tomatoes and Pine Nuts recipe.

Related Video: How to Make Herb and Leek “Orzotto” With Fried Eggs



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The Ultimate Guide to Picnicking

How to pack the perfect summer picnic

The picnic is one of the annual joys of warm-weather (and sometimes cool-weather) eating. On West Coast beaches, where the Pacific crashes into rocks along the horizon; in Midwest forests, and among the dunes of Lake Michigan; and in manicured urban parks in the Northeast, we love nothing better than to lift the lid of a cooler, flip open an old-fashioned hamper, and pop the lids of Tupperware to lay out a feast.

Planning a picnic is more than just dragging outdoors the food you’d already be cooking. Throwing a great picnic is the result of a few factors: the setting, the weather (obviously), and the ease of serving and assembly (grilling marinated chicken skewers or portobello mushroom caps on coals is one thing; assembling and cooking panini on site, in a cast iron skillet precariously perched on cinderblocks over a fire, is another).

Still, we’re living in an era of peak picnic. Whereas in the 1970s and ‘80s opening a pack of Ballpark hot dogs and untwisting some supermarket buns would’ve passed for a fine outdoor meal, we’ve gotten more sophisticated, both in our creativity with food and our eye for serving pieces (big thanks to Pinterest for upping our collective game when it comes to the latter).

Let’s start by looking back, though—at the rich past of picnicking.

HISTORY…ON A BLANKET

Picnics were born in the sumptuous outdoor feasts that were traditions of the wealthy. Medieval hunting feasts, Renaissance country banquets, and Victorian garden parties: They’re all precursors of even humble cookouts in the 21st century. This wasn’t merely a European tradition. Similar outdoor feasts took place in Persia, China, and other non-Western geo locations.

The first picnics, in England anyway, were medieval hunting feasts: pastries, hams, baked meats, and more. They stayed much the same, though adjusted according to the wealth of a household, until the Victorian era, arguably the most refined era in the history of picnics. Nineteenth-century painters (Monet, Renoir, Cezanne) were brilliant chroniclers of picnics and outdoor entertainments.

LINGERING TASTES OF PICNICS PAST

Our rather curious English word derives from the French pique nique (the meaning is murky, except for the connotations around “picking”). It originally referred to a kind of potluck, typically indoors, where everyone brought something to eat.

The change in the sense of picnic from “potluck” to “eating outside” was noticeable by the 1860s. What survived was the mingled notions of “impromptu” with “informal”—still a strong implication in any modern conception of picnicking.

JAMES BEARD’S CHILDHOOD PICNICS ON THE OREGON COAST

“I was brought up in a household famous for its fabulous cooking, and the memories of my childhood are full of one fine meal after another. But the most exciting of all were the magnificent family picnics. Huge hampers and baskets were filled with an endless array of delectable tidbits to be consumed in the great outdoors—on a wide sandy beach by the Pacific, or high in the mountains where blue and red huckleberries grew in abundance, or along some winding road deep in a canyon beside a rushing stream. For the cold food and drink, we stopped at an ice-house and picked up a large cake of ice which sat on the floor in the back of the car with the perishables on top. If we wanted anything hot, and we usually planned on coffee at least, we’d build up a fire in the open or if we were near woods that might catch from fire, we’d manage with a little alcohol stove.”
From “James Beard’s Menus for Entertaining” (1965)

10 PRACTICAL TIPS FOR PERFECT PICNICS

1. Go enamel.
Enamel plates are light, easy to pack and carry, and practical—you can load them up with baked beans and salad, let it sit for 20 minutes, and they won’t sog out and collapse. They also look and feel cooler than plastic, and are way better for the environment than disposable dishes. See some of our favorite handy-dandy eco-friendly gear here.

2. Bring something to do.
Even scintillating conversation can lag after a while. Plan for boredom by bringing activities: board games, sand castle construction gear, books, and coloring books, adult or otherwise. These are easy to pack in and out, and easy to make an afternoon of delicious food even tastier.

3. Take food you can pick up easily.
Stuff with built-in handles, like chicken drumsticks, fruit on skewers, and corn on cobs, is all inherently picnic friendly. As much as you can minimize forks, spoons, and knives, you want to.

4. Have a bug plan.
Flying critters and creepy crawlies will assail even the most urban picnic. Plan for this. Have a strategy. That could mean packing and/or serving food and drinks in containers with lids (Mason jars, for instance), packing mesh covers, and toting plastic wrap. Shower caps can even come in handy for both covering bowls and keeping them chilled.

Three-Bean Salad

Chowhound’s Three-Bean Salad

5. Don’t skimp on salads.
We all like something seared and crispy off the grill, but the spirit of most picnics is sylvan, meaning that salads are always appropriate. Make and pack as many as you think you’ll eat: green and grain salads for sure, but don’t forget fruit salad, chopped salads, or potato salad either. A whole spread of salads is fresh, colorful, light, and versatile. Bring any dressings in small jars and add them when you get there.

6. Travel light.
Sure, folding tables and camp chairs and hassocks and tents and dishes look cool in the movies, but those were scenes of millionaires or Roman generals, with an army of servants to carry and set up. Keep your picnic swag as concisely edited as possible.

7. Shell out for a good cooler.
A Styro cooler might be a good option when you’re in college, but come on: Nobody wants to tote a fragile, unwieldy container of plastic foam filled with ice and beverage bottles onto a beach. Pay a little extra for a great cooler—you’ll use it year after year. In other words, it’s an investment that delivers dividends.

8. Pack more wet naps and garbage bags than you think you’ll need.
They’re effortless to haul home, and when you need them…you need them.

9. Bring blanket weights and other wind deterrents.
Few things are as annoying as setting up the perfect al fresco spread, only to find the weather conspiring to scatter stuff. Have weights and tethers in mind: nearby rocks you can weight blankets with, stakes, simple napkin holders. Mother Nature can be cruel.

10. Don’t even think of packing anything messy.
You’re in the woods. Or on a picnic table in a city park. Even if you can run to a public restroom to wash your 8-year-old’s face of BBQ sauce or cake frosting, you’re not going to want to have to play scrub-down. Think of un-messy picnic foods: sandwiches, frittatas, oven-fried chicken.

NAGGING QUESTION: WILL MAYO MAKE YOU SICK?

It’s a question as old as egg salad, with a conventional-wisdom answer: Of course you can get sick from mayo sitting out at room temperature for an afternoon. But is that really true, or a cultural assumption? Roxanne Webber talks to experts to get to the bottom of this foodborne illness query. The answer is surprising. Here’s an excerpt:

“In the 1980s, the Food Research Institute of the University of Wisconsin conducted studies showing that, in the presence of mayo, harmful bacteria slow in growth, or die. Because the commercial manufacturing of mayonnaise follows standards defined by the FDA, the product “contains sufficient amounts of acid to kill salmonella and some other harmful food-borne bacteria,” says Michael P. Doyle, PhD.” If you’re still wary (or just hate mayo), bring one of these mayo-free potato salads to your next outdoor gathering.

BOOKS ABOUT PICNICS TO INSPIRE YOUR OWN TALE-WORTHY FEASTS

1. “The Picnic: Recipes and Inspiration from Basket to Blanket”
by Marnie Hanel, Andrea Slonecker, and Jen Stevenson

“The Picnic,” writes Entertainment Weekly, “is a gorgeously illustrated cookbook and a treasure trove of inspiration. In addition to its whimsically adorned recipes, there are instructions for solving picnic crises and tips on food presentation.”

2. “Picnic in Provence: A Memoir with Recipes”
by Elizabeth Bard

“Bard traveled to New York from the beautiful village of Céret,” writes the James Beard Foundation, “deep in the heart of southern France, to share her enchanting real-life fairy tale.”

3. “Everything Tastes Better Outdoors”
by Claudia Roden

“From a cosmopolitan welter of reminiscences, recipes, quotations, and suggestions,” notes Kirkus Reviews, “Roden, a much-traveled Sephardi and author of the excellent A Book of Middle Eastern Food, has put together a more comprehensive and infinitely livelier book than Hemingway and Maricich’s The Picnic Gourmet (1977) or other, kindred entries. It treats 1) home-cooked food to be carried out to ballpark or bosky dell, 2) techniques of outdoor cookery under different circumstances, and 3) strategies for cooking while motoring, boating, or backpacking.”

4. “Paris Picnic Club: More Than 100 Recipes to Savor and Share”
by Shaheen Peerbhai and Jennie Levitt

This charmingly illustrated book is the product of two friends who made picnic-style meals every Friday in France for a small group that eventually grew to over 80 guests—and their meals moved on to parks and hidden parts of Paris. The recipes in the book are good for picnics, of course, but also for home-bound dinners with the flavor of an al fresco meal.

5. “Graze: Inspiration for Small Plates and Meandering Meals”
by Suzanne Lenzer and Nicole Franzen

Similarly, this book of small yet vibrant plates is good for ideas when deciding how to pack your next picnic, or for eating a fun picnic-style meal indoors.

PICNIC RECIPE IDEAS

Perfect Picnic Recipes for the Ultimate Day at the Beach

From seafood salad to pineapple and grape skewers and beyond, here’s a delicious checklist of recipes to keep in your picnicking repertoire. The thing about cooking for a picnic, is that food does not have to be boring in the interest of packability. Let your imagination soar as high as the sky under which you’ll be napping, full on Summer Berry Salad and Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies. Don’t forgot the sunglasses and SPF 30. Get our Perfect Picnic Recipes for the Ultimate Day at the Beach.

French Recipes for a Bastille Day Picnic

Think ham-and-camembert baguettes and little chocolate pots de crème. It’s all très chic, but super easy (well, except for the fancy macarons). Get our French Recipes for a Bastille Day Picnic.

10 Herbal Lemonades to Upgrade Your Summer Picnic

Since you need something to drink on your outing, why not jazz up the standard lemonade with different herbs? Get our 10 Herbal Lemonades to Upgrade Your Summer Picnic.

herbed potato salad

Chowhound’s Herbed Potato Salad

11 Picnic-Perfect Vegetarian Dishes

Whether you want to pack a totally meat-free picnic or just find some sturdy and delicious veggie sides, we’ve got you covered. Get our 11 Picnic-Perfect Vegetarian Dishes.

10 Steak Sandwiches for Your Next Summer Picnic

Then again, if you want something meatier, steak sandwiches are hearty and easy to bring along—way better than your usual lunch meat, even if it’s the fancy kind from the deli. Get our 10 Steak Sandwiches for Your Next Summer Picnic.

Pasta Salads Perfect for Picnics

Pasta salad is a classic, but it doesn’t have to be stodgy or boring. Liven it up with pesto, grilled vegetables, antipasto platter ingredients, and more. Get our Pasta Salads Perfect for Picnics.

Easter Picnic Recipes

Spring holidays are the perfect occasions to break out the picnic basket. They’re festive, naturally, so a first-of-the-year event like a casual family meal outdoors is a fitting way to honor them. Easter, in particular, is linked to renewal, rebirth, flowers and green things sprouting, and a picnic is just the thing for reinforcing that narrative. Check out our 3 dozen recipe suggestions for the ideal Easter picnic.

An Italian Inspired Picnic Spread

Marinated bocconcini, bruschetta, and a jammy crostata are just some of the delicious dishes you can pack for an Italian-accented picnic. Get our An Italian Inspired Picnic Spread.

how to plan a fall or winter picnic

Alena Ozerova/Shutterstock

How to Pull Off the Perfect Early Fall Picnic

Summer may be prime time for picnics, but they don’t have to end when it starts getting cooler. See How to Pull Off the Perfect Early Fall Picnic.

Related Video: What You Must Know When Packing a Picnic



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What Is the Difference Between Arugula and Watercress?

What's the difference between arugula and watercress?

They’re both peppery greens that are delicious in a salad, but arugula and watercress aren’t quite interchangeable—arugula stands up to heat better (watercress can quickly turn to mush) and packs a spicier punch.

Often used as a garnish, watercress is actually a nutrient-packed superfood that is cultivated in water. On the ANDI (Aggregate Nutrient Density Index) that evaluates the nutrients in foods relative to the amount of calories, watercress is the only food to score a perfect 100 (arugula comes in at 37.65). The flavor intensifies as the plant ages, so young watercress has a milder flavor that is preferred if you’re eating it raw.

Arugula (also known as rocket) is a cruciferous vegetable that has a spicy kick (similar to the peppery taste of watercress but more intense). Similarly filled with vitamins and minerals, arugula contains many antioxidants and is served raw in salads, as well as cooked. Arugula is a frequent pizza topping (it’s a versatile green that wilts well, maintaining its flavor and shape) and is especially popular in Europe.

Want to find out the differences between arugula and watercress for yourself? Check out these nine recipes and pick your favorite spicy green.

Watercress and Arugula Salad

Watercress and Arugula Salad with Blue Cheese, Dates, and Almonds

Chowhound

Get crazy and use both watercress and arugula in this refreshing recipe that combines blue cheese, crunchy almonds, and a honey-Dijon dressing that brings out the best in these beloved greens. Get our Watercress and Arugula Salad recipe.

Baby Arugula Salad with Nectarines

Arugula’s peppery kick makes it pair beautifully with summer fruit. These nectarines are paired with toasted hazelnuts, but you can substitute any stone fruit or change it up for winter and fall picks of whatever is in season. Get our Baby Arugula Salad with Nectarines recipe.

Arugula Walnut Pesto

Arugula Walnut Pesto

Chowhound

Move over, basil. Arugula’s new in town and you’re going to love this new pesto. Use walnuts instead of pine nuts, and this pesto will make a great sandwich spread that begs to be included at your next picnic. Get our Arugula Walnut Pesto recipe.

Bitter Greens Salad

Bitter Greens Salad with Caper Vinaigrette

Chowhound

Pair arugula with several other bitter greens, including endive and radicchio, and add in capers with a vinegar-based dressing. You can wash the greens ahead of time and prep this as a last-minute salad that goes well with any grilled meats. Get our Bitter Greens Salad recipe.

Watercress-Walnut Pesto

Watercress Walnut Pesto

Chowhound

This recipe is a wonderful way to use that leftover bunch of watercress. Create a batch of fresh pesto in minutes by adding fresh lemon juice, vinegar, parmesan, walnuts, garlic, salt, and a half cup of olive oil. Get our Watercress-Walnut Pesto recipe.

Watercress Salad with Grapes, Blue Cheese, and Pecans

Watercress Salad with Grapes, Blue Cheese, and Pecans

Eating Well

Make a quick vinaigrette with Dijon mustard, white wine vinegar, and shallots to toss on this healthy but delicious combination of watercress, halved grapes, blue cheese, and toasted pecans. Get the recipe.

Watercress Salad with Manchego, Membrillo, and Almonds

Watercress Salad with Manchego, Membrillo, and Almonds

Chowhound

This Spanish-inspired simple salad is a great way to round out a heavy meal—serve as an appetizer and make sure to toast the almonds before tossing in along with the Manchego cheese. If you can’t find membrillo (quince paste), you can substitute with the fruit of your choice. Get our Watercress Salad with Manchego, Membrillo, and Almonds recipe.

Potato and Cheese Pizza

Potato and Cheese Pizza

Chowhound

Smoked mozzarella, potatoes, garlic, and thyme are a unique pizza topping that make a fantastic base for a handful of watercress leaves (dressed with a tablespoon of lemon-garlic vinaigrette). The ultimate summer pizza with a hint of green. Get our Potato and Cheese Pizza recipe.

Arugula, Egg, and Charred Asparagus Salad

Arugula, Egg, and Charred Asparagus Salad

Cooking Light

Be sure to char the asparagus lightly and then serve this flavorful salad with a crusty baguette. Cook the eggs to your liking (you can do hard-boiled or let the yolks remain somewhat runny) and make enough to save some for lunch the next day. Get the recipe.

Related Video: How to Make a Low-Fat Salad Dressing



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