Author Archives: Larry Sanderson

Food! Glorious Food! — The All Turkey Edition

SECOND LIFE
The Fashion Photographer Who Traded Film for Flour


Six years ago, Norman Jean Roy walked away from his career behind the camera. These days, he’s baking bread.
By NICK MARINO

FOOD MATTERS
In the Arctic, Reindeer Are Sustenance and a Sacred Presence
For the Indigenous communities who herd the animals, safeguarding dying culinary traditions isn’t merely about eating but about protecting a longstanding way of life.


A spread of Arctic provisions including, from left, sun-dried white trout, moose antler, venison sausage, caribou blood sausage, dried Arctic flounder, dried sea bream, caribou lichen, meadow onion stems and seed heads, dried wild crowberries and geothermal Arctic sea salt against a deer hide backdrop.
By LIGAYA MISHAN

Call It Friendsgiving, Call It Podsgiving, Just Don’t Forget the Green Beans
Thanksgiving is even more of a logistical puzzle this year, and some people are solving it differently.
By COURTNEY RUBIN

THE FIX
A Dining Room That Celebrates Every Meal
Even with a socially distant Thanksgiving around the corner, you can create a dining room that lives up to the food you’re serving.
By TIM MCKEOUGH

Solo on the Holiday? Reach Out
Single people make up one third of all American households and finding ways to celebrate this Thanksgiving means taking action ahead of time.
By ANNA GOLDFARB

How to Scale Down Your Favorite Thanksgiving Recipes
Here are some tips for adapting beloved dishes for a smaller gathering.


Instead of a whole turkey, you can choose to cook just a part of the turkey, like the thighs.
By MELISSA CLARK

A GOOD APPETITE
A Sweet, Simple Menu of Thanksgiving Recipes for Two
Tiny is the new big this holiday season, and making a small meal can be just as festive — and a whole lot easier — than a feast.


Clockwise from left, maple-roasted squash, sautéed greens with smoked paprika, herby bread-and-butter stuffing, and turkey thighs with pickled cranberries and onions.
By MELISSA CLARK

FRONT BURNER
Maybe Just Get the Turkey Leg This Year
Dickson’s Farmstand Meats in Chelsea Market now sells turkey leg confit, for an understated, but festive celebration.


Confit turkey legs, $28 each, Dickson’s Farmstand Meats, Chelsea Market, 75 Ninth Avenue, lower level (15th Street), 212-242-2630, dicksonsfarmstand.com.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

FRONT BURNER
A Sparkling Dessert Collaboration
Jeni’s Splendid Ice Creams and Chandon have teamed up on a new sparkling berry punch sorbet for the holidays.


Jeni’s Sparkling Berry Punch Featuring Chandon, $12 a pint, jenis.com.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

FRONT BURNER
An Ancient Grain Flour for Your Pie Crust
This gluten-free flour from the chef Thomas Keller’s company can be used, as the brand says, measure for measure.


Cup4Cup Ancient Grains, $13.99 for two pounds, cup4cup.com.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

FRONT BURNER
You’ll Want to Dig Into These Pumpkins
These new lidded pumpkin bowls from Sur La Table add some joy to the Thanksgiving table.


Pumpkin bowl with lid, $12, surlatable.com.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

16 Thanksgiving Sides to Make You Forget About the Turkey
We all know they’re the best part of the meal.
By KRYSTEN CHAMBROT

The Crunchiest, Creamiest, Tangiest Brussels Sprouts
The unfairly maligned vegetable gets an update with creamy labneh and irresistible pickled shallots.


By Nik Sharma

From pizzas to smoothies: 10 unexpected and delicious ways with brussels sprouts
After years as pariahs, these little marvels are now the nation’s favourite green vegetable. Here are 10 imaginative ways to make the most of them – without waiting for Christmas


Stuart Heritage

Start a New Tradition With Your Thanksgiving Potatoes
For faster, more flavorful Thanksgiving potatoes, do as J. Kenji López-Alt does, and stir-fry them.


By J. Kenji López-Alt

12 Easy Recipes for a Thanksgiving Beginner
These simple dishes will set you up for a spectacular meal.
By MARGAUX LASKEY

The Buttermilk-Brined Turkey of Your Thanksgiving Dreams
Every November, people ask Samin Nosrat if her beloved roast chicken recipe works with turkey. She decided to find out.

Credit…Romulo Yanes for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Vivian Lui.
YouTube Video
By Samin Nosrat

Our Food Staff’s 21 Favorite Thanksgiving Recipes
Reporters and editors shared the holiday dishes they love. Here are their recommendations.
By EMILY FLEISCHAKER

Food
From pasta pies to caramel bars: Yotam Ottolenghi’s pumpkin recipes
This year’s pumpkin blowout features a kabocha pasta pie, a spicy roast pumpkin with tahini sauce and a rich take on millionaire’s shortbread
Yotam Ottolenghi

You Deserve This Pasta
Alexa Weibel’s mushroom ragù might be a little over the top for a Wednesday, but it’s absolutely worth it.
By EMILY WEINSTEIN

12 Thanksgiving Desserts Worth Saving Room For
Here’s what you need to make the end of the meal shine.

  1. Brandied Pumpkin Pie
  2. Skillet Caramel-Apple Crisp
  3. Carrot Cake
  4. Bourbon Pecan Pie
  5. Cranberry Curd Tart
  6. Sweet Potato Pie
  7. Pecan Pie Truffles
  8. Apple Pie
  9. Pumpkin Cheesecake Bars
  10. Crème Brûlée Pie
  11. Pumpkin Layer Cake With Caramel Buttercream
  12. Tart Lemon Pie
    By KRYSTEN CHAMBROT

The Right Apple Pie for a Pandemic Thanksgiving
From choosing the apples to shaping the dough, Genevieve Ko finds ways to modernize this comforting classic.

Use as many varieties as you can in this mixed apples pie. Credit…Johnny Miller for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Susan Spungen.
Use as many varieties as you can in this mixed apples pie.
By Genevieve Ko

Holiday Flavors on Ice
Bend the dessert rules this Thanksgiving: Skip the pie and churn some festive ice cream or sorbet instead.

Toasted pecans are tossed with maple syrup before they’re mixed into a French vanilla ice-cream base. Credit…Christopher Simpson for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Toasted pecans are tossed with maple syrup before they’re mixed into a French vanilla ice-cream base.
By Florence Fabricant

This Is the Best Poundcake
Keith Lee, a son of Otis Lee, who ran Mr. Fofo’s Deli in Detroit, shared his father’s famous recipe. Make it soon.


YouuTube Video
By SAM SIFTON

How to live now
Walking
Beat the cold: 17 delicious piping hot drinks to put in your flask for long winter walks
From slow-cooked hot chocolate to mulled wine, and foolproof tea and coffee, here are gallons of warming wonders for those frosty treks
Stuart Heritage

FRONT BURNER
A Cocktail Timesaver for Turkey Day
High West, a Utah distillery, sells two bottled cocktails worthy of holiday enjoyment.


High West Barrel Finished Old-Fashioned and Manhattan, $50 each, highwest.com.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

WINES OF THE TIMES
Good Wines Won’t Fix Thanksgiving, but They Couldn’t Hurt
Refreshing and Ready for Thanksgiving

Credit…Karsten Moran for The New York Times
White Wines

★★★ Lioco Sonoma County Chardonnay 2018 $22
Tangy, textured, energetic and balanced, with earthy, stony, floral and citrus flavors.

★★★ Julian Haart Mosel Riesling “1,000L” 2018 One Liter $24
Lively, bold and rich, with floral and mineral flavors. (Vom Boden, Brooklyn, N.Y.)

★★★ Gia Coppola Lake County Orange Riesling 2019 One Liter $25
Pretty orange wine, with an amber color, flavors of dried fruits and flowers, and a light touch of tannins.

★★★ Domaine les Aphillanthes Côtes du Rhône Clémentia Blanc 2019 $20
A “sunny wine,” as Julia Moskin put it, with flavors of tropical fruits, flowers and a kiss of honey. (Weygandt-Metzler, Unionville, Penn.)

Red Wines

★★★ Castello di Verduno Verduno Basadone 2018 $24
Fresh and lively, with bright, spicy, incisive flavors of purple fruits, earth and a touch of citrus. (Polaner Selections, Mount Kisco, N.Y.)

★★★ Franck Balthazar Selections Côtes du Rhône 2018 $22
Lively, spicy and fresh, with earthy, peppery flavors. (Savio Soares Selections, New York)

★★★ Forlorn Hope Queen of the Sierra Rorick Heritage Vineyard Calaveras County 2017 $22
Bright, fresh and energetic, with complex flavors of red fruits and herbs.

★★★ Hound’s Tree High Wire North Fork of Long Island Pinot Noir NV $23
Light-bodied, with lively flavors of red fruits and a touch of refreshing bitterness.
By Eric Asimov

Chairman of Elite Wine Group Resigns Amid Its Sexual Harassment Scandal
Devon Broglie is the latest figure in the Court of Master Sommeliers to be accused of an inappropriate relationship.
Devon Broglie resigned Friday as chairman of the board of the Court of Master Sommeliers, Americas. The group is in turmoil following sexual misconduct allegations against at least 11 members.
By Julia Moskin

When Wine Is More Than Just a Drink
The winemaker Taras Ochota, who died in October, created unique wines that were a touchstone for our Australia critic.

Taras Ochota, an idiosyncratic South Australia winemaker who named all of his wines after bands and songs, died last month at 49. Credit…Andre Castellucci
Taras Ochota, an idiosyncratic South Australia winemaker who named all of his wines after bands and songs, died last month at 49.
By Besha Rodell

Goodbye Herr Trump!

At last! At long last! Goodbye, Herr Trump. Don’t let the door hit you in the ass when you leave.

Your title is safe. History will remember you and your followers like they remember Mussolini and Hitler. Most of the rest of us are going to try and rinse the sour and bitter taste of the last four years away.

NYT Critic’s Pick Movie(s)

The Dark and the Wicked
NYT Critic’s Pick | Not Rated | Horror | Directed by Bryan Bertino
A family is threatened by a diabolical entity in this frightening and emotionally fraught horror movie.


Marin Ireland in “The Dark and the Wicked.” Credit…RLJE Films/Shudder
By JEANNETTE CATSOULIS

Let Him Go
NYT Critic’s Pick | R | Crime, Drama, Thriller | Directed by Thomas Bezucha
The mature chemistry of Kevin Costner and Diane Lane goes a long way in this searing thriller.


Diane Lane and Kevin Costner in “Let Him Go.” Credit…Kimberley French/Focus Features
By GLENN KENNY

— Of Possible Interest —

Mortal
R | Action, Adventure, Fantasy | Directed by André Øvredal
André Ovredal’s new fantasy film seems more concerned with setting up a sequel than delivering answers.


Nat Wolff in “Mortal.’’ Credit…Saban Films
By BEN KENIGSBERG

‘The Informer’ Review: Lock Up or Shut Up
The film, starring Joel Kinnaman as a mole in a mob-run drug trade, makes for an absorbing time killer.

Joel Kinnaman in “The Informer
Joel Kinnaman in “The Informer.” Credit…Liam Daniel/Vertical Entertainment
By Ben Kenigsberg

‘Koko-di Koko-da’ Review: Torture, Kill, Repeat
A grieving couple is terrorized by three psychopaths in this unsettling Swedish horror movie.

Leif Edlund in “Koko-Di Koko-Da.”
Leif Edlund in “Koko-Di Koko-Da.” Credit…Dark Star Pictures
By Jeannette Catsoulis

Food! Glorious Food!

UKRAINE DISPATCH
A New Front Opens in the Russia-Ukraine Conflict: Borscht
“A lot of things were taken away from Ukraine, but they will not take our borscht,” said a chef who is leading a drive to recognize the soup as a Ukrainian cultural heritage.

Olha Habro, 76, preparing borscht in Borshchiv, Ukraine. Credit...Oksana Parafeniuk for The New York Times
Olha Habro, 76, preparing borscht in Borshchiv, Ukraine.
By Maria Varenikova and Andrew E. Kramer

If Restaurants Go, What Happens to Cities?
Restaurants have been crucial in drawing the young and highly educated to live and work in central cities. The pandemic could erode that foundation.
By Eduardo Porter

The International Space Station: 20 Years of Promise, Peril and Fun
The need for caffeine was the mother of invention.

Donald Pettit demonstrated his zero-gravity coffee cup on the space station in 
2008.Credit...NASA TV
Donald Pettit demonstrated his zero-gravity coffee cup on the space station in 2008.
By Mary Robinette Kowal

A Vegetarian Chef’s Flavor-Packed Quarantine Snack
Amy Chaplin, best known for her plant-based cookbooks, shares a recipe for onigiri, something she often makes for herself.

Chaplin’s take on the dish is inspired by her memories of eating at the original Iku Wholefood, a pioneering macrobiotic cafe in Glebe, Australia, as a teenager in the ’90s. Credit...Paul Quitoriano
Chaplin’s take on the dish is inspired by her memories of eating at the original Iku Wholefood, a pioneering macrobiotic cafe in Glebe, Australia, as a teenager in the ’90s.
By Kari Molvar

The Original Nachos Were Crunchy, Cheesy and Truly Mexican
Ballpark and Tex-Mex nachos are both ubiquitous in the United States. But the original version is deeply rooted in the borderlands and Mexican home cooking.

Ignacio Anaya, a maître d’hôtel at a restaurant in Piedras Negras, in Coahuila, Mexico, created nachos in 1940. The original recipe has just three elements: tortilla chips, cheese and pickled jalapeños. Credit...Christopher Simpson for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.
Ignacio Anaya, a maître d’hôtel at a restaurant in Piedras Negras, in Coahuila, Mexico, created nachos in 1940. The original recipe has just three elements: tortilla chips, cheese and pickled jalapeños.
By Pati Jinich

The Many Lives of Lentils
In stew, in pasta or in a bright, vegetarian loaf, there’s much to be done with this trusty legume, David Tanis writes.

From left, a brightly spiced lentil loaf, a smoky lentil stew and a pasta with lentils and fennel. Credit...Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
From left, a brightly spiced lentil loaf, a smoky lentil stew and a pasta with lentils and fennel.
By David Tanis

A GOOD APPETITE
Looking for Comfort? Turn to This Beef Stew
Homey, savory and soothing, this beef stew made with ale and red onions tastes even better the next day.

Serve this beef stew with a starch, like egg noodles or polenta, to sop up its juices. Credit...David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Maggie Ruggiero.
Serve this beef stew with a starch, like egg noodles or polenta, to sop up its juices.
By Melissa Clark

Comfort Food Recipes to Help You Feel Better
Send in the carbs.

Credit...Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Hadas Smirnoff.
By The New York Times

Election Cake, a Forgotten Recipe, Rises Online
Searches for this cake, which dates to colonial times, are gaining steam ahead of Election Day.

A recipe for election cake appeared in “American Cookery,” a cookbook published in 1796.Credit...James Ransom
A recipe for election cake appeared in “American Cookery,” a cookbook published in 1796.
By Becky Hughes

Tasting History — Election Cake with Q&A

Elite Wine Group Suspends Master Sommeliers
After recent sexual harassment allegations by many women, the Court of Master Sommeliers has apologized and announced next steps.

The Court of Master Sommeliers confers the most prestigious title in American wine. Credit...Karsten Moran for The New York Times
The Court of Master Sommeliers confers the most prestigious title in American wine.
By Julia Moskin

The Wine World’s Most Elite Circle Has a Sexual Harassment Problem
The Court of Master Sommeliers confers high honors, but many women candidates say they’ve paid a steep price.


From left, Liz Mitchell, Jane Lopes, Victoria James and Courtney Schiessl say they experienced sexual harassment as candidates for the Court of Master Sommeliers.
By Julia Moskin

RUSSIA DISPATCH
In Russia’s Idyllic Wine Country, Dark Tales of Dreams Dashed
A verdant slice of southern Russia evokes Tuscany and produces surprisingly magical wine. But bureaucratic nightmares and police raids intrude on the aspirations of upstart vintners.

Collecting grapes at Yannis Karakezidi’s vineyard outside Anapa, Russia. Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
Collecting grapes at Yannis Karakezidi’s vineyard outside Anapa, Russia.
By Anton Troianovski

NYT Critic’s Pick Movie(s)

City Hall
NYT Critic’s Pick | Documentary | Directed by Frederick Wiseman
In his latest movie, the celebrated documentarian explores the ideas and ideals, the faces and spaces of Boston’s City Hall.


Boston’s mayor, Martin J. Walsh, at a food bank in a scene from Frederick Wiseman’s “ City Hall.” Credit…Film Forum
By MANOHLA DARGIS

Raining in the Mountain
NYT Critic’s Pick | Action, Drama | Directed by King Hu
This recently restored film by King Hu is a spectacular, exhilarating entertainment.


A scene from “Raining in the Mountain.” Credit…Film Movement
By GLENN KENNY

Food! Glorious Food!

TRILOBITES
Sharks Wash Up on Beaches, Stabbed by Swordfish
The discovery of impaled sharks on Mediterranean shores backs up old fishermen’s tales of the marine predators dueling with swordfish.
Evidence suggests sometimes a swordfish really is a fish with a sword.
By Joshua Sokol

TIMES INSIDER
Giving Recipe Creators Their Due
The NYT Cooking team created a new way to credit the original sources of recipes. But applying the change to The Times’s vast archive of dishes took months of collaboration.
About 20 percent of recipes on NYT Cooking have been adapted for home cooks from another source, like the recipe for this stuffing from Marilyn Monroe.
By Elisha Brown

Share Your Story of Keeping America Fed
We want to hear from farmers, meatpackers, grocers and other essential workers who have kept the country fed throughout the pandemic.
By The New York Times

Cupcake caterpillar and super-gooey brownies: David Atherton’s easy bake recipes for children


Banana cupcakes, rich brownies and an upside-down sponge – three simple cakes for young bakers to make their own
David Atherton

What cooking skills should children learn?
What sort of tasks in the kitchen should kids know how to do at different ages?
Anna Berrill

FRONT BURNER
This Chile Crisp Has a Momofuku Pedigree
The Momofuku Culinary Lab now sells the condiment to drizzle over ice cream or spice up a main course.


Credit…Andrew Bezek
Momofuku Chili Crunch, $10 for 5.3 ounces, peachykeen.momofuku.com.
By Florence Fabricant

FRONT BURNER
A West Coast Kouign-Amann
Manresa now ships its crackly Breton confection nationwide, just in time for a holiday dessert table.

Credit...Alyssa Twelker
Kouign-Amann, $60 for two, manresabread.com.
By Florence Fabricant

FRONT BURNER
Culinary Historians Turn to Zoom
Ben Katchor, the author of “The Dairy Restaurant,” will discuss his book virtually with the Culinary Historians of New York.

Ben Katchor
Ben Katchor talk, 6:30 p.m., Nov. 16, free for members, $10 for nonmembers and guests, culinaryhistoriansny.org.
By Florence Fabricant

FRONT BURNER
For a Cheese Lover, Two New Books
Anne Saxelby and Alexandra Jones have written informative cheese guides, and the books complement each other.

Credit...Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
“The New Rules of Cheese: A Freewheeling and Informative Guide” by Anne Saxelby (Ten Speed Press, $14.99); “Stuff Every Cheese Lover Should Know” by Alexandra Jones (Quirk Books, $9.99).
By Florence Fabricant

Take Comfort in Pumpkin This Season
You can roast, purée and bake with them. (And don’t forget the seeds.)

Samantha Seneviratne’s pumpkin bread is an unfussy classic.Credit...Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Eugene Jho.
Samantha Seneviratne’s pumpkin bread is an unfussy classic.
By Margaux Laskey

Finding Strength in Sofrito in Puerto Rico
Hardship and hurricanes have shaped the island’s food for centuries. But chefs and home cooks make magic with whatever ingredients they have.

The chef Natalia Vallejo, at her home in Cayey, P.R., closed her San Juan restaurant, Cocina al Fondo, because of Covid-19. She is constantly cooking at home and planning for a future when she can be back in a restaurant kitchen. Credit...Christopher Gregory for The New York Times
The chef Natalia Vallejo, at her home in Cayey, P.R., closed her San Juan restaurant, Cocina al Fondo, because of Covid-19. She is constantly cooking at home and planning for a future when she can be back in a restaurant kitchen.
By Von Diaz

You’ll Definitely Want to Keep This Savory Sauce on Hand
Rich with roasted red pepper, it’s excellent alongside a giant couscous cake, or any other pantry meal.

Giant couscous cake with roasted pepper sauce.Credit...Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Giant couscous cake with roasted pepper sauce.
By Yotam Ottolenghi

Capturing the Heat and Crunch of Indonesian Cooking
In “Coconut & Sambal,” the chef Lara Lee leads a culinary expedition through one of the most populous countries in the world.

A recipe for nasi goreng, a staple Indonesian fried rice dish, appears in the new cookbook “Coconut & Sambal,” by the chef Lara Lee.Credit...Johnny Miller for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.
A recipe for nasi goreng, a staple Indonesian fried rice dish, appears in the new cookbook “Coconut & Sambal,” by the chef Lara Lee.
By Kayla Stewart

A GOOD APPETITE
This Dessert Goes Out to the Crust Lovers
Galettes offer a better ratio of crust to filling than pie, and this one delivers a rich maple-pecan frangipane wrapped up in plenty of buttery, flaky pastry.

Maple-pecan galette with fresh ginger.Credit...Romulo Yanes for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Vivian Lui.
Maple-pecan galette with fresh ginger.
By Melissa Clark

Sorted Foods does a cook off on an English Breakfast (one chef at 2.50 and one normal at 15.00 pounds)

FULL BREAKFAST BUDGET BATTLE | CHEF (£2.50 Budget) vs NORMAL (£15 Budget) | Sorted Food

Seasons Change. Classic Drinks Do, Too.
The hot toddy and mulled wine get an update to meet cooling, but still not quite cold temperatures.

A modern hot toddy.Credit...Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.
A modern hot toddy.
By Rebekah Peppler

THE POUR
How Income Inequality Has Erased Your Chance to Drink the Great Wines
Benchmark bottles were always a splurge. But an increasing concentration of wealth has put them out of reach for all but the richest connoisseurs.
By Eric Asimov

Cecilia Chiang, Who Brought Authentic Chinese Food to America, Dies at 100
With her famed Mandarin restaurant in San Francisco, she enticed diners with the dishes she grew up with, leaving the American chop suey and chow mein era far behind.


Cecilia Chiang at her home in San Francisco in 2019. As a daughter of wealth, she fled the Japanese during World War II, traveling nearly 700 miles on foot, before arriving in San Francisco.
By William Grimes

NYT Critic’s Pick

What the Constitution Means to Me
NYT Critic’s Pick | Drama | Directed by Marielle Heller
The timing could not be better for Heidi Schreck’s affecting play about the Constitution’s impact on our daily lives, now streaming on Amazon.


ByHeidi Schreck in “What the Constitution Means to Me.” Credit…Joan Marcus/Amazon ELISABETH VINCENTELLI

Synchronic
NYT Critic’s Pick | R | Drama, Horror, Sci-Fi | Directed by Justin Benson, Aaron Moorhead
The filmmakers Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead bend reality in this drug-fueled sci-fi horror.


Jamie Dornan, left, and Anthony Mackie in “Synchronic.” Credit…Well Go Usa
By GLENN KENNY

Ham on Rye
NYT Critic’s Pick | Comedy, Drama | Directed by Tyler Taormina
Tyler Taormina’s debut film starts in the vein of classic high-school comedies until it turns toward a dark surrealism.


From left, Haley Bodell, Gabriella Herrera and Audrey Boos in “Ham on Rye.” Credit…Carson Lund/Factory 25
By GLENN KENNY

— Of Possible Interest —

The Witches
PG | Adventure, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Horror, Mystery | Directed by Robert Zemeckis
In this new take on the Roald Dahl book, Robert Zemeckis sets loose his cameras, and Octavia Spencer side-eyes Anne Hathaway.


Jahzir Bruno in “Roald Dahl’s The Witches,” | Directed by Robert Zemeckis. Credit…HBO MAX
By MANOHLA DARGIS

Friendsgiving
R | Comedy, Drama | Directed by Nicol Paone
Nicol Paone’s film takes a surprisingly charming and hilarious approach to a traditional holiday.


Malin Akerman, left, and Kat Dennings in “Friendsgiving.” Credit…Elko Weaver/Lionsgate
By LOVIA GYARKYE

Over the Moon
PG | Animation, Adventure, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Musical, Sci-Fi | Directed by Glen Keane, John Kahrs
This animated Netflix adventure falters once its tween heroine touches down on a gaudy moonscape.


Fei Fei, voiced by Cathy Ang, with Gobi, voiced by Ken Jeong, in “Over the Moon.” Credit…Netflix
By NATALIA WINKELMAN

Borat Subsequent Moviefilm
R | Comedy | Directed by Jason Woliner
It’s an amusingly harebrained scheme, but there’s nothing in this moviefilm that matches the elegant social experiment of the first.
By DEVIKA GIRISH

Food! Glorious Food!

MEXICO CITY DISPATCH
2 Broke Artists Started a Bakery at Home. It’s a Pandemic Hit.
They didn’t have an oven. Their apartment resembled Santa’s workshop set up in a dorm room. But two rookie bakers are thriving in Mexico City, where food and entrepreneurism go hand-in-hand.

David Ayala-Alfonso, center, and Andrea Ferrero boxing up their cakes and brownies in Mexico City this month. They recently hired Yorely Valero, left, to help them in the business.Credit...Meghan Dhaliwal for The New York Times
David Ayala-Alfonso, center, and Andrea Ferrero boxing up their cakes and brownies in Mexico City this month. They recently hired Yorely Valero, left, to help them in the business.
By Natalie Kitroeff

FEATURE
The Fed-Up Chef
Gaggan Anand turned his Indian restaurant in Bangkok into a pilgrimage site for globe-hopping foodies. So why, even before the pandemic hit, was he willing to give it up?


“If you are here to judge me,” Gaggan Anand says, “you are in the superwrong restaurant.” Credit…Amanda Mustard for The New York Times
By Sheila Marikar

The Promise of Pawpaw
Issues like climate change, economic inequity and access to food have brought more attention to this creamy fruit and its resilient tree.

Devon Mihesuah, a professor of native history and culture at the University of Kansas, holding the ancient, native North American fruit tree still found across most of the eastern half of the United States.Credit...Barrett Emke for The New York Times
Devon Mihesuah, a professor of native history and culture at the University of Kansas, holding the ancient, native North American fruit tree still found across most of the eastern half of the United States.
By Rachel Wharton

How to Grow (and Eat) a Pawpaw
When to plant and when to harvest this native North American fruit.

Pawpaws produce filling fruits that are creamy when ripe and taste like a blend of banana, pineapple and mango.Credit...John Taggart for The New York Times
Pawpaws produce filling fruits that are creamy when ripe and taste like a blend of banana, pineapple and mango.
By Rachel Wharton

EAT
This Tuna-Salad Sandwich Is Julia Child-Approved Lunch

Credit...Photograph by Heami Lee Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Rebecca Bartoshesky.
By Dorie Greenspan

A GOOD APPETITE
A Childhood Favorite Reimagined
Harissa and lamb, pork and fennel, and vegan mushroom with leeks and farro make sophisticated fillings for the humble Australian sausage roll.

These Australian sausage rolls are inspired by those made at Bourke Street Bakery near Madison Square Park in Manhattan.Credit...Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.
These Australian sausage rolls are inspired by those made at Bourke Street Bakery near Madison Square Park in Manhattan.
By Melissa Clark

FRONT BURNER
Wear Your Heart on Your Feet
For lovers of all things sprinkles, there’s a new shoe collaboration between Vans and Flour Shop.


By Florence Fabricant

FRONT BURNER
Brush Up Your Pie Skills
The cookbook author Kate McDermott teaches a series of pie-making classes online, via the 92nd Street Y.

Kate McDermott, right, will share her pie skills virtually in a series of classes at the 92nd Street Y.Credit...via Kate McDermott
Kate McDermott, right, will share her pie skills virtually in a series of classes at the 92nd Street Y.
Intro to Making Pies With Kate McDermott, Oct. 26, Nov. 2, Nov. 9, 6:30 to 8 p.m., $120, 92Y.org, 212-415-5500.
Florence Fabricant

A ‘Perfect’ Chocolate Chip Cookie, and the Chef Who Created It
The British pastry chef Ravneet Gill ran countless tests to arrive at her version of the classic recipe.

The dough is rolled into balls right away, as opposed to chilling it first, giving these chocolate chip cookies gentle domes in the center.Credit...Ryan Liebe for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Hadas Smirnoff.
The dough is rolled into balls right away, as opposed to chilling it first, giving these chocolate chip cookies gentle domes in the center.
By Charlotte Druckman

In Trying Times, 20 Wines Under $20 That Revive and Restore

Credit...Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
If you are tired of drinking the same old thing, these bottles, from nine different countries, represent the wide range of great values now available.

Dautel Württemberg Weissburgunder Trocken 2017 $15.99
Pedro Parra y Familia Secano Interior Itata Vinista País 2018 $15.99
Fabre Montmayou Mendoza Cabernet Franc Reserva 2019 $16
Domaine de la Bastide Côtes du Rhône 2018 $16.96
Storm Point Swartland Chenin Blanc 2019 $16.99
Château la Grolet Côtes de Bourg 2017 $17.96
A Los Viñateros Bravos Itata Pipeño Tinto 2019 1 liter $17.99
Trediberri Dogliani Bricco Mollea 2019 $17.99
Foxglove Paso Robles Zinfandel 2016 $18
Roca Altxerri Getariako Txakolina Camino 2019 $18.99
Matthiasson Napa Valley Chardonnay Village 2019 $18.99
Bodegas Hermanos Peciña Rioja Blanco Señorío de P. Peciña 2018 $19
Bodegas Yuste Aurora Manzanilla NV 500 milliliters $19.99
Keller Rheinhessen Riesling Trocken 2019 $19.99
Aslina by Ntsiki Biyela South Africa Cabernet Sauvignon 2017 $19.99
Compañía de Vinos del Atlántico Vara y Pulgar Vino de la Tierra de Cádiz Tintilla 2015 $19.99
Casa de Saima Bairrada Baga Bruto 2017 $19.99
Feudo Montoni Sicilia Nero d’Avola Lagnusa 2017 $19.99
Chiara Condello Romagna Sangiovese Predappio 2017 $19.99
Xavier Weisskopf Le Rocher des Violettes Vin de France Chenin 2019 $19.99

By Eric Asimov

Hot Toddy Season Comes Early This Year
Outdoor seating and dropping temperatures have created a demand for warming cocktails at New York City bars.


The Manhattan bar Dante has a Blue Blazer, a 19th-century flaming whiskey drink.Credit…Jeenah Moon for The New York Times
By Robert Simonson

NYT Critic’s Pick Movie(s)

Belly of the Beast
NYT Critic’s Pick | Documentary | Directed by Erika Cohn
Erika Cohn’s new documentary focuses on the sterilization of women in California prisons, and the battle for a law against the practice.

When Kelli Dillon was 24 years old, a doctor at the California facility where she was incarcerated sterilized her without consent. That experience, and the way it galvanized Dillon to bring attention to this human rights violation, anchors Erika Cohn’s timely and bracing new documentary “Belly of the Beast.”


Kelli Dillon, testifying about her experience, in “Belly of the Beast,” a documentary | Directed by Erika Cohn. Credit…Idle Wild Films/PBS Independent Lens
By LOVIA GYARKYE

White Riot
NYT Critic’s Pick | Documentary, Music | Directed by Rubika Shah
Rubika Shah’s documentary about the British organization Rock Against Racism is a compelling depiction of political organizing in the 1970s.

Since rock is no longer the dominant form of popular music, it’s hard to say how much good reviving the story of the British-born organization Rock Against Racism could do. But one of the many things that “White Riot,” a documentary about RAR directed by Rubika Shah, brings home is that the world could still use more somethings against racism.


Music with a message: From left, Mick Jones, Joe Strummer and Paul Simonon of the Clash, as seen in “White Riot.” Credit…Film Movement
By GLENN KENNY

Martin Eden
NYT Critic’s Pick | Drama, Romance | Directed by Pietro Marcello
In this bold adaptation of the Jack London novel, a young writer suffers, fights and pays as he stands alone against the world.

The entirety of the 20th century — its promises, illusions and traumas — sweeps through the audacious and thrilling “Martin Eden.” An ingenious adaptation of the Jack London novel, the film follows its title character, a humble young man as he embarks on a program of self-improvement. Like a hero out of Horatio Alger, Martin strives to change and to advance. A voracious autodidact, he succeeds. But his rags-to-rich path with its hard work, perseverance and bourgeois education, proves far more complicated and finally more shattering than most upward-mobility fairy tales.


Something like desire: Luca Marinelli and Jessica Cressy in “Martin Eden.” Credit…Francesca Errichiello/Kino Lorber
By MANOHLA DARGIS

— Of Possible Interest —

David Byrne’s American Utopia
Documentary, Music, Musical | Directed by Spike Lee
Spike Lee joins forces with David Byrne for a joyous concert movie that rocks and delights, sending you high and then higher.

The first thing you should do when you’re ready to watch “David Byrne’s American Utopia” — and you should watch this exuberant concert movie from Spike Lee — is clear some room in front of your TV. Move any chairs, rugs, tables and cats out of the way. Check your sound, crank the volume, press play. It may take a few songs for every part of you to get moving. But by the time Byrne and company perform “This Must Be the Place (Naïve Melody),” you may find yourself levitating.


Remaining in light: David Byrne and company in “American Utopia,” Spike Lee’s film version of Byrne’s stage show. Credit…David Lee/HBO
By MANOHLA DARGIS

Love and Monsters
PG-13 Adventure, Comedy | Directed by Michael Matthews
The new sci-fi adventure from Michael Matthews lacks the self-seriousness of typical dystopian flicks but doesn’t completely lack depth.

In “Love and Monsters,” an imaginative post-apocalyptic coming-of-age film from the South African director Michael Matthews (“Five Fingers for Marseilles”), an asteroid doesn’t destroy civilization, but humanity’s attempt to stop it does.


Dylan O’Brien in “Love and Monsters.” Credit…Paramount Pictures
By LOVIA GYARKYE

Food! Glorious Food!

A Disrupted Thanksgiving Leaves the Turkey Business Guessing
Without big gatherings, will Americans buy whole birds? Smaller ones? Just parts? Farmers and retailers are already placing their bets.

John Peterson, a farmer in Cannon Falls, Minn., is trying to anticipate what customers who travel to his family’s Ferndale Market for their Thanksgiving turkeys will want during a holiday changed by the pandemic. Credit...Jenn Ackerman for The New York Times
John Peterson, a farmer in Cannon Falls, Minn., is trying to anticipate what customers who travel to his family’s Ferndale Market for their Thanksgiving turkeys will want during a holiday changed by the pandemic.
By Kim Severson

Where’d I Stash That Chocolate? It’s Easy to Remember
People were more likely to remember the locations of high-calorie foods they’d smelled or tasted than the locations of low-calorie foods.
Nicholas Bakalar

Pilgrim’s Pride to Pay $110 Million to Settle Charges of Fixing Chicken Prices
The Justice Department said the company helped fix the price of chicken and passed the cost to consumers.


The Pilgrim’s Pride plant in Cold Spring, Minn. In June, the company’s then-chief executive was charged with price fixing.
By Eshe Nelson and Carlos Tejada

EAT
The Evolution of the Onion Sandwich

Photograph by Heami Lee Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Rebecca Bartoshesky.
By Tejal Rao

You Won’t Want to Share This Roasted Cauliflower
Olives, crispy Parmesan and pancetta bring out the vegetable’s gentler, most irresistible side.


By Melissa Clark

FRONT BURNER
A Wine Dispenser for Your Counter


The Boxxle, which holds four bottles of wine or the wine bladder from a box wine, conveniently dispenses wine whenever you need it.
Boxxle, $99; replacement bags, $9.99 for three; boxxle.com.
By Florence Fabricant

WINE SCHOOL
For Northern Rhône Reds, It’s Not the Age but the Emotions
By Eric Asimov