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Good morning. I’m Emily Weinstein, the Food and Cooking editor here at The New York Times, and I’ll be your host today. Are you having an excellent long weekend? Have you had pancakes yet? Are you already diving headlong into cookie-making with Gantt charts and custom holiday baking playlists?
I’ve got a week’s worth of cooking recommendations for you, but let’s not move on from Sunday too quickly. I love the look of Ali Slagle’s new recipe for refried white beans with chile-fried eggs (above), the sunshine yellow of the yolk set on that creamy cloud of crushed beans. Refried beans are typically made with pinto or black varieties, and cooked in lard. But white beans are a delicious and effective departure from tradition, and you can swap in olive oil for the lard.
Now, let’s talk about the week ahead …
Kay Chun’s sesame salmon bowls are as delicious as they are clever. Inspired by the Japanese dish chirashi, the salmon steams directly on top of the vinegar-seasoned rice, and the finished bowls are adorned with shredded cabbage and sliced cucumbers for a juicy crunch.
Pierre Franey’s chicken breasts with lemon are timeless, an easy and elegant way to put dinner on the table. Franey recommends serving the chicken with mashed potatoes, but I’d go for a fresh pot of rice.
This new recipe comes from the brilliant mind of Yewande Komolafe, who mixes flavors and textures with confidence and flair. Here she roasts tofu, chickpeas and cherry tomatoes in a za’atar-spiced marinade for a great weeknight dinner.
A simple way to make a table full of people happy is to set down a big, saucy, bubbling baking dish in front of them. Here’s one option for how that could look, courtesy of Lidey Heuck.
You’ve reached the end of the week, and I can’t think of anything that’d be better than Vallery Lomas’s tangy pimento mac and cheese, a power coupling of classic Southern dishes.
There are thousands more recipes for you to scroll through on New York Times Cooking, and videos and inspiration on TikTok, Instagram and YouTube. You’ll need to subscribe to access our recipes. And don’t forget that you can give a New York Times Cooking subscription as a gift!
You can reach me at [email protected]; the tip lines are open, so tell me what you’re cooking, baking and drinking right now. I love to hear from you, and I read every note. You can also sign up to receive my newsletter, Five Weeknight Dishes, which offers recipe ideas for busy people who still want something good to eat. If you encounter technical issues with our website or apps, write to [email protected], and someone will get back to you.
Until next time. And if you haven’t seen our YouTube series “Mystery Menu,” starring the chefs (and couple) Sohla and Ham El-Waylly, it’s fantastic. Highly recommended!
After garnering two Michelin stars, glowing reviews and a “discovery” nod from the World’s 50 Best Restaurants, one of LA’s most lauded tasting-menu restaurants closed two years ago with little notice. Next year, it’s set to return.
Somni, from chefs Aitor Zabala and José Andrés, sprouted passion fruit tulips from chocolate dirt; arranged tuna katsu into the shape of a battle ax before it could be coated in saffron and caviar; and injected strawberry-shaped cocoa butter nubs with vermouth, strawberry purée and Aperol until its closure in August 2020, creating some of the most whimsical dishes available in LA during its brief run. In late summer 2023, Zabala will reprise the concept in West Hollywood, with additional seating and new items.
The restaurant’s cuisine, sometimes experienced in upwards of 20 courses — seasonal ingredients depending — was by Times food critic Bill Addison as one that “blurs the line between whimsy and academia, between applied theory and cheeky cleverness”: difficult to pinpoint, harder still to categorize under any nationality.
“The circle was never closed with Somni; he was interrupted,” Zabala said by phone. “Everyone is closed in the pandemic, but it’s not natural, you know? [There was] something is missing, and I was feeling that it’s not the right ending for a dream — and I am the person always looking for the next dream, but this dream, I was feeling there was no ending.”
The closure was credited in part to the COVID-19 pandemic, even though it also occurred amid a lawsuit filed by the SLS Hotel’s ownership that would shutter both Somni and Andrés’ the Bazaar, which was also housed on the ground floor of the property. The ending felt abrupt to the restaurants’ fans and staff alike. When they closed, Zabala said, they’d recently hit their stride with staffing and training and accolades. Even though he could have launched a new project after the closure, he felt there was still more of Somni to explore.
Chef Aitor Zabala, in 2019, had a dream of opening his own restaurant since he was 19 or 20. In 2023, he plans to reprise Somni, which translates to “dream” in Catalan.
(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)
The chef, who had dreamed of opening his own restaurant since he was 19 or 20, first moved to the US in 2007, persuaded by Andrés to leave El Bulli during its seasonal closure and help him develop LA’s Bazaar. He returned to Spain and the kitchen of El Bulli, then in 2010 gave Los Angeles another chance, returning to Andrés and, with him in 2018, debuting Somni.
Zabala opened the restaurant under José Andrés’ ThinkFoodGroup hospitality firm (now called José Andrés Group). When the doors closed, Andrés gave Zabala permission to continue the restaurant without him, should he wish to revive it. What followed were two years of recipe experimentation in Zabala’s test kitchen in Silver Lake, aided by a staff member he was able to retain from the restaurant. Together, they’ve been experimenting with new ingredients and formats and jotting down their recipes and findings in a large folder full of old and new Somni recipes. The trick, Zabala says, will be transitioning from testing one or two dishes at a time to preparing food for up to 20 for a seating of diners.
“It’s been really hard work in the last two years,” he said, “but hopefully, it’s paying off now.”
He searched for investors during this time too and worked some private events, but what proved most difficult was locating a bricks-and-mortar spot. Zabala estimates he visited more than 60 sites. This year, he settled on 9045 Nemo St. in West Hollywood, the former home of a Donna Karan retail storefront and a flower shop.
The space featured a kitchen, but it was nowhere near what Somni needed; that required a custom build-out of a new, open kitchen and dining room (with much the same layout of the original). The original counter — 10 seats in a horseshoe around an open kitchen — will be expanded to 14 in the West Hollywood location. The property is nearly double the size of Somni’s original dining room and includes a patio, which will be used to welcome guests with bites and sips before the meal begins. That additional space is also set to accommodate a six-seater private dining room.
The chef is hoping the more private locale will prove more tranquil for diners, as opposed to the buzz of the Bazaar’s multiple concepts humming just beyond the original Somni’s doors.
“We had a really small space inside the Bazaar, and I felt sometimes it was really aggressive seating with all the noises,” Zabala said. “That experience is great, but you come in for another type of experience [at Somni]. Here what we
Cooking for Christmas! Blake Shelton revealed some of his and Gwen Stefani‘s favorite holiday traditions — and the couple are big proponents of the culinary arts.
“Gwen and I, our cooking tradition has become during Christmas — and not just like your normal, typical [dishes],” the country singer, 46, explained in Us Weekly‘s exclusive clip from NBC’s Christmas in Rockefeller Center special. “But we always challenge ourselves and try to come up with a different, weird, complicated, difficult thing to cook every year. It started one year [when] she wanted to do a beef Wellington, which is not easy, by the way.”
The Oklahoma native explained that he and the No Doubt frontwoman, 53, try to do “something weird and new” every year. “Gwen’s family, there’s a lot of Italian blood in her family,” Shelton added. “And so there’s tons of pasta and there’s a reason that I have a chin like a stork the last five years. It’s because I’m hanging out with the Stefanis now.”

Gwen Stefani, Blake Shelton.
Photo Image Press/ShutterstockAlthough the couple — who tied the knot in July 2021 — collaborated on several duets, the “God’s Country” singer revealed that cooking with his wife is much easier than making music together. “Singing with Gwen is way harder than cooking with her,” he explained. “Cooking is easy for us because neither one of us really knows what we’re doing, and all we do is laugh the whole time. With music, we actually take [it] serious.”
Fans can catch the duo’s latest collaboration on Christmas in Rockefeller Centerwhich airs on NBC Wednesday, November 30. The twosome are scheduled to perform alongside musicians including Jimmie Allen, Katharine McPheeDan + Shay, Mickey Guyton, Alicia Keys and more. The two-hour special — co-hosted by Savannah Guthrie, Hoda Kotb, Craig Melvin and Mario López — will also include a performance by the Radio City Rockettes and a bit by Amy Poehler and Maya Rudolph.
In between the musical numbers, the performers will share some of their favorite holiday traditions and explain what Christmas means to them. Stefani, for her part, asked her husband what Christmas felt like to him, and he had an adorable response: “You.”
The “Hollaback Girl” singer revealed that she and Shelton “bonded over” Christmas music earlier in their romance. “You make it feel like Christmas,” the Voices the judge joked, referencing their duet “You Make It Feel Like Christmas.” He quipped: “It’s not even Christmas tonight, but you make it feel like it is. … How cheesy is this bit?”
Christmas in Rockefeller Center airs on NBC Wednesday, November 30, at 8 p.m. ET.