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Free Recipe


Sheet-Pan Maple Dijon Sausage with Cabbage and Apples
When School Feels Far Away: A Sausage Sheet Pan and Small Stories From the Day: A cozy maple‑Dijon dinner, gentle conversation starters, and learning to give our kids space after school I ’m writing this bonus post because my children went back to school today after a four‑day weekend, and my brain hasn’t quite caught up. The house is suddenly quiet in that unfamiliar way, and in the first hours of separation I can’t help wondering what their day is like. Are they happy? Are


Spiced Beef with Stone Fruit Rice and Lime Yogurt
This is the sort of dinner that feels like a little occasion on a weeknight: fragrant spiced beef, rice studded with soft, sweet‑tart stone fruit, roasted squash, and a cool spoonful of lime yogurt over the top. It all happens in a couple of pans, but the plate looks like you’ve done far more work than you actually have. Think of it as a gentle way to nudge the family toward bigger flavors without leaving anyone behind. The base is ground beef, rice, whatever stone fruit is o


Valentine’s Bonus: Escargot at Our Gathered Table
I know “jarred snails” isn’t the first phrase that comes to mind when you think “romantic dinner.” But stay with me. Most restaurants that serve escargot—the ones with pressed‑linen tablecloths and wine lists you have to squint at—are not sourcing snails from a magical secret farm out back. They’re using the same trusted brands of preserved escargot you can buy, then surrounding them with frankly outrageous amounts of butter, garlic, and herbs. The romance is in the ritual, n
Kale, Potato, Chicken & Cucumber Salad with Tahini
This is the kind of dinner that makes a weeknight feel quietly special: warm slices of seared chicken and caramelized potatoes layered over marinated kale, all finished with a bright tahini dressing, ripe avocado, and crisp English cucumber for balance and texture.
Market Vegetable Cod en Papillote with Zesty Lemon-Parsley Couscous
This cod en papillote with lemon herb couscous comes together quickly yet feels like an occasion. Tender fish, crisp-tender vegetables, and bright, fragrant couscous all cook with minimal fuss, making it an easy weeknight option that still feels special. Children are especially delighted by the little “present” of parchment, opening each packet at the table to discover the steamy, aromatic fish and vegetables inside. The recipe is also wonderfully flexible: swap in your favor
Pear & Calvados Weeknight Cake
There’s something quietly triumphant about a homemade dessert on a weeknight. No one expects it; everyone assumes dinner is the finish line. This pear and Calvados cake is the exception I like to make when I have just a sliver of extra bandwidth and want the evening to end softly. It’s a simple butter cake you can put together in one bowl: everything goes into the mixer with the paddle attachment, pears are fanned over the top, and the whole thing bakes while you eat. By the
A Quietly Special Duck Dinner (on a Weeknight)
Every now and then, I like to throw the table a little curveball: something that looks like it belongs on a restaurant menu but still fits inside a regular Tuesday. This duck dinner is exactly that. It gives you crisp skin, a jammy orange–red wine sauce, duck‑fat mashed potatoes, and a bright arugula salad—without requiring a whole day in the kitchen or a sink full of pans. It’s built to feel a little bit like date night at home while still being friendly to whoever wanders t
Pork Schnitzel with Brown‑Butter Spaetzle
For the weekend, the table shifts from “platter in the middle” to something a bit more European: crisp pork schnitzel with a bowl of buttery spaetzle and a simple green or cucumber salad. Thin pork cutlets are pounded until tender, dipped in flour, egg, and fine breadcrumbs, then pan‑fried in a shallow layer of oil and butter until golden and crisp, ready for a squeeze of lemon at the table. Alongside, there is a pan of soft, irregular spaetzle—little egg dumplings dropped in
Maple Chicken Wings
There are nights when the table calls for a platter in the middle, a stack of napkins, and permission to eat with your hands. These Maple Chicken Wings are that kind of dinner: audibly crisp, generously sauced, and flanked by cool vegetables that stand in as the “salad” you dip right into the same bowls as the wings. Why this Belongs at the Gathered Table This recipe takes the classic bar‑style wing and settles it right into the family kitchen. The wings bake on a rack in a h
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