NYT Critic’s Pick Movie(s)

A Banquet
NYT Critic’s Pick | Horror | Directed by Ruth Paxton
A family of grieving women is thrown once more into chaos when the eldest daughter refuses to eat, saying she must do so by divine decree.


By LENA WILSON

— Of Possible Interest —

Downfall: The Case Against Boeing
PG-13 | Documentary | Directed by Rory Kennedy
This documentary on Netflix leaves the impression that the 737 Max’s entire existence is rotten.
By BEN KENIGSBERG

Food! Glorious Food!

The New Secret Chicken Recipe? Animal Cells.
Here’s an early taste of the laboratory-grown meat that companies are racing to bring to market, and a look at the questions it raises about how we feed ourselves.
By KIM SEVERSON

U.S. Temporarily Bans Avocados From Mexico, Citing Threat
The move is a blow to the Mexican state of Michoacán, which exports roughly $3 billion worth of the fruit annually.
By JULIE CRESWELL

Forget Chocolate Bars: Baking With Chips Is Often Better
It’s not just nostalgia. Those bagged chips can lead to better-tasting desserts, Genevieve Ko explains.
By Genevieve Ko

IN THE GARDEN
Are Your Tomatoes ‘Epic’? If Not, Here’s What You Should Be Doing
Tomato experts Craig LeHoullier and Joe Lamp’l have some advice for you.


Nearly 12,000 heirloom tomato varieties are listed in the annual Seed Savers Exchange yearbook, a staggering choice for gardeners, who can choose among hundreds of hybrids for the right tomatoes to match their particular space and soil conditions.
By MARGARET ROACH

24 Brilliant Baking Recipes to Change Your Kitchen Game
These delectable treats are full of light-bulb moments that educate as much as they impress.
By KRYSTEN CHAMBROT

EAT
Chicken and Potatoes With Commanding Flavor
Country Captain is a Southern classic with roots in the British Empire. This Anglo-Indian version is simple yet luxurious.


By LIGAYA MISHAN

A GOOD APPETITE
Refresh Your Sweet Potatoes With Fried Eggs
Melissa Clark adds eggs, almonds and warming spices to a 2011 dish for a lifting, smoky meatless meal.

Roasting in coconut oil is the key to these sweet potatoes, which are delicately crisp on the outside and velvety within.
Roasting in coconut oil is the key to these sweet potatoes, which are delicately crisp on the outside and velvety within.
By Melissa Clark

FRONT BURNER
The Perfect Sheet Pan for a Big Batch of Brownies
The higher sides on Nordic Ware’s new half-sheet pan allow for more options in the kitchen.


Nordic Ware Nonstick High-Sided Oven Crisp Baking Tray, $42.50, nordicware.com.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

FRONT BURNER
Del Monte Pineapples Go Pink
The company has been cultivating the Pinkglow variety since 2005 in Costa Rica.


Pinkglow pineapple by Fresh Del Monte
Pinkglow Pineapples, $12.99 each, $75.95 for six from Baldor Food, baldorfood.com; about $30 each from Melissa’s, Tropical Fruit Box and Full Moon Fruits. They’re also sold at some supermarkets, including Wegman’s.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

FRONT BURNER
Where to Start With Balkan Wines
The website Wine&More offers hundreds of wines from Croatia and the surrounding region.


thewineandmore.com.
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

THE POUR
12 Natural Wines to Drink Now
For 20 years, natural wine has been dismissed as a fad or a fraud. Yet more people make it, more drink it and good bottles are easier to find.


By ERIC ASIMOV

NYT Critic’s Pick Movie(s)

Kimi
NYT Critic’s Pick | R | Crime, Drama, Thriller | Directed by Steven Soderbergh
Zoë Kravitz stars in the latest from Steven Soderbergh, a story that plays with genre, triggers your anxieties and shreds your nerves.


Zoë Kravitz in Steven Soderbergh’s woman-in-peril movie “KIMI.”
By MANOHLA DARGIS

Playground
NYT Critic’s Pick | Drama | Directed by Laura Wandel
In this stunning Belgian drama, a little girl and her brother go to school, read, write, fight and learn some brutal lessons about life.


Family ties: Maya Vanderbeque, left, and Günter Duret play brother and sister in Laura Wandel’s “Playground.”
By MANOHLA DARGIS

The Sky Is Everywhere
NYT Critic’s Pick | PG-13 | Drama | Directed by Josephine Decker
Josephine Decker unlooses a slipstream of adolescent passion and anguish in this radiant drama about a musician grieving the loss of her big sister.


Jacques Colimon, left, with Grace Kaufman in “The Sky Is Everywhere.”
By NATALIA WINKELMAN

— Of Possible Interest —

The Fabulous Filipino Brothers
Comedy, Romance | Directed by Dante Basco
The Abasta family of California is celebrating a wedding. The Basco family writes, directs and stars in this warm, welcoming comedy.
By TEO BUGBEE

Death on the Nile
PG-13 | Crime, Drama, Mystery | Directed by Kenneth Branagh
Kenneth Branagh’s second adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot stories forgets the simple pleasures of ensemble excess and pure messing about.
By NICOLAS RAPOLD

Indemnity
Action, Thriller | Directed by Travis Taute
This South African thriller trades plausibility and originality for a worthy substitute: a great deal of fun.
By DEVIKA GIRISH

Big Bug
TV-MA | Comedy, Sci-Fi | Directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet
A squabbling family is locked in its home by robots in this overlong artificial-intelligence comedy on Netflix.
By JEANNETTE CATSOULIS

Food! Glorious Food!

Greece holidays
‘A unique culinary repertoire’: What makes food and drink in Thessaloniki so special?

Bars and restaurants in the popular Ladadika district of Thessaloniki, northern Greece.
Bars and restaurants in the popular Ladadika district of Thessaloniki, northern Greece.
Greece’s first Unesco city of gastronomy is famed for perfect pastries, spicy meatballs, wine, frappés and local specialities reflecting a rich cultural heritage
Elise Morton

How The Sims Became the Internet’s Most Exciting Place to Eat
The 22-year-old life-simulation video game has evolved into a world where players can farm, forage, cook and learn about the many ways people experience food.
By NIKITA RICHARDSON

‘A Sense of Crisis’ for Wasabi, a Pungent Staple of Japanese Cuisine
Climate and demographic threats are chipping away at a centuries-old culture surrounding the cultivation of the fluorescent green plant.


By MOTOKO RICH, MAKIKO INOUE and SHIHO FUKADA

PEOPLE, PLACES, THINGS
Home-Cooked Vietnamese Meals, Served Up Alongside Bouquets
In Berlin, a small flower shop is now offering twice-monthly lunches, with such dishes as spring rolls, crab noodle soup and salad garnished with edible blooms.

A Vietnamese spread of cá chiên (fried dorade marinated with garlic), sườn xào chua ngọt (sweet-and-sour pork ribs) and canh chua (sweet-and-sour soup with pork broth and mirabelle).
A Vietnamese spread of cá chiên (fried dorade marinated with garlic), sườn xào chua ngọt (sweet-and-sour pork ribs) and canh chua (sweet-and-sour soup with pork broth and mirabelle).
By Gisela Williams

This Chicken Will Take You to Spain
Ali Slagle’s paprika-spiced recipe with fries, inspired by patatas bravas, is transporting.


By EMILY WEINSTEIN

This Valentine’s Day, Make It a Kitchen Date
With this special menu, you can enjoy the splendors of a restaurant-worthy meal in your own home — and have fun cooking, too.

This dinner menu of individual beef Wellingtons, cheesy pan-seared radicchio and olive oil ice cream with hot fudge is as joyous to prepare as it is to eat.
This dinner menu of individual beef Wellingtons, cheesy pan-seared radicchio and olive oil ice cream with hot fudge is as joyous to prepare as it is to eat.
By Eric Kim

These Bold Mushrooms Are Ready to Meet the Moment
Portobellos served atop a versatile chile-bell pepper sauce and finished with corn nuts are perfect for 2022, Yotam Ottolenghi writes.

Prepared indoors on a grill pan, this hearty and satisfying vegetable dish is a little bit of summer in winter.
Prepared indoors on a grill pan, this hearty and satisfying vegetable dish is a little bit of summer in winter.
By Yotam Ottolenghi

SHOPPING GUIDE
Shopping for Cake Stands
Because you might want to bake a cake for Valentine’s Day.
By TIM MCKEOUGH

How to Cook to Feel Good
Tofu curry, garlic rasam and dumpling soup deserve a spot in your rotation.


By TEJAL RAO

CRITIC’S NOTEBOOK
Indigenous Ingredients and Inspired Baking Mastery, at Gusto Bread
A modern panadería in Long Beach, Calif., is challenging the idea of Eurocentric authority in the fine pastry realm.


By Tejal Rao

A GOOD APPETITE
The Magic of Meringues
Don’t be intimidated by this marvel of food science: It’s much easier than you think to get the lofty egg whites of your dreams. Melissa Clark explains.


This raspberry meringue tart is just the thing to impress your sweetheart on Valentine’s Day.
By MELISSA CLARK

How to make lemon meringue pie – recipe

Felicity Cloake's lemon meringue pie.
Felicity Cloake’s lemon meringue pie.
An explosion of colour and flavour to blast away those winter blues
Felicity Cloake

How to Make the Best Meringues
Melissa Clark has tips to yield results that are sure to impress. Let her set you up for success.
By MELISSA CLARK

The Warm, Sticky-Sweet Resurgence of Hotteok
Crisp and chewy on the outside, gooey on the inside, the popular street food feels nostalgic for some Korean Americans, novel to others.

Hotteok, a Korean pancake often filled with sugar, nuts and cinnamon, was brought to the country by Chinese immigrants in the late 19th century.
Hotteok, a Korean pancake often filled with sugar, nuts and cinnamon, was brought to the country by Chinese immigrants in the late 19th century.
By Priya Krishna

THE POUR
The Wine Business Sees a Problem: Millennials Aren’t Drinking Enough
As baby boomers retire and buy less wine, producers need new ways to tempt a White Claw generation back from other alcoholic drinks, according to a new report.
By ERIC ASIMOV

NYT Critic’s Pick Movie(s)

Lingui
NYT Critic’s Pick | Drama | Directed by Mahamat-Saleh Haroun
In this electric liberation story from Chad, a mother struggles to protect her daughter’s future and finds both herself and a world of possibility.

Rihane Khalil Alio, left, and Achouackh Abakar Souleymane in Mahamat-Saleh Haroun’s “Lingui, the Sacred Bonds.”
Rihane Khalil Alio, left, and Achouackh Abakar Souleymane in Mahamat-Saleh Haroun’s “Lingui, the Sacred Bonds.”
By MANOHLA DARGIS

The Worst Person in the World
NYT Critic’s Pick | R | Comedy, Drama, Romance | Directed by Joachim Trier
Renate Reinsve stars in Joachim Trier’s funny-sad story of a woman on the verge of figuring herself out.


Renate Reinsve and Anders Danielsen Lie in “The Worst Person in the World,” from the director Joachim Trier.
By A.O. SCOTT

Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché
NYT Critic’s Pick | Documentary, Biography, Music | Directed by Celeste Bell, Paul Sng
In this new documentary, Poly Styrene’s daughter grapples tenderly with the legacy of her punk rock mother.


Poly Styrene as seen in the new documentary “Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché.”
By LISA KENNEDY

Jackass Forever
NYT Critic’s Pick | R | Documentary, Action, Comedy | Directed by Jeff Tremaine
Sharp cinematography and enviable camaraderie continue to hoist Johnny Knoxville and friends above their many imitators in this deceptively kindhearted sequel.


Clockwise from left: Johnny Knoxville, Rachel Wolfson, Steve-O and Sean McInerney in “Jackass Forever.”
By AMY NICHOLSON

— Of Possible Interest —

Moonfall
PG-13 | Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi | Directed by Roland Emmerich
Halle Berry and Patrick Wilson save the world from a rogue moon in the latest disaster movie from the director of “Independence Day.”
By BEN KENIGSBERG

Food! Glorious Food!

Restaurants to Customers: Don’t Call Us, We Won’t Call You
When restaurants abandon their phone lines, it can make the lives of employees easier but leave diners confused and frustrated — or relieved.
By Victoria Petersen

On the Cajun Coast, a Chef Grapples With Threats to a Seafood Tradition
From her New Orleans restaurant, Melissa Martin sees the environmental damage that could end the region’s rich culture of food and fishing.
By Brett Anderson

McDonald’s, now with higher prices, topped $23 billion in revenue in 2021.
Profit soared 59 percent from a year earlier, to $7.5 billion.
McDonald’s said global revenues for 2021 reached the highest level since 2016.
By Julie Creswell

Top 10 cooks in fiction
From PG Wodehouse’s ‘peerless’ Anatole to John Lanchester’s merciless Tarquin Winot, a novelist chooses her favourite kitchen creations
Annabel Abbs

A GOOD APPETITE
This Scottish Chicken Soup Is Its Own Kind of Medicine
Rich with chicken, leeks and prunes, this cock-a-leekie soup from Melissa Clark is a penicillin of a different order.

The rich fruitiness of prunes sets this recipe apart from many chicken soups.
The rich fruitiness of prunes sets this recipe apart from many chicken soups.
By Melissa Clark

A Brand-New Cake From a Pastry Paradise
Paris’s Left Bank is brimming with sweets, including the financiers that inspired this elegant and easygoing dessert.


By Dorie Greenspan

The Accidental Vegetarian
Vegetable-centric meals aren’t just delicious; they’re also incredibly well suited for weeknight cooking.
By Nikita Richardson

A paleo-friendly chicken soup owes its velvety texture to a Cantonese cooking technique


By Ann Maloney

By The Way
Dragons, dumplings and draft beer: How three cities are celebrating Lunar New Year
By Huong Truong, Youngrae Kim and Amanda Villarosa

How to make the perfect pork (or chicken, duck or tofu) larb – recipe
Larb, larp, laap, lap … however you spell it, this salty-sour staple of south-east Asia has myriad versions, which won’t stop our resident perfectionist from seeking out the best


Felicity Cloake

The Best Wine Glass for Any Occasion: Our Critic Reviews 5 New Contenders
Each turns holding and swirling a goblet into a rare and sensual pleasure. But how do they differ when it comes to experiencing the wine?


These five high-end glasses are intended for all wines.Credit…Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
By Eric Asimov

NYT Critic’s Pick Movie(s)

Compartment Number 6
NYT Critic’s Pick | R | Drama, Romance | Directed by Juho Kuosmanen
A young Finnish woman embarks on a journey of self-discovery that takes her (and you) through richly detailed and surprising terrain.


Seidi Haarla in “Compartment No. 6,” | Directed by Juho Kuosmanen.
By MANOHLA DARGIS

The Fallout
NYT Critic’s Pick | R | Drama | Directed by Megan Park
Jenna Ortega stars as a teenager coping with the aftermath of a school shooting in this grounded and compassionate look at adolescent grief.


Jenna Ortega, right, with Julie Bowen in “The Fallout.”
By CLAIRE SHAFFER

Futura
NYT Critic’s Pick | Documentary | Directed by Pietro Marcello, Francesco Munzi, Alice Rohrwacher
Three filmmakers travel Italy in the midst of the pandemic, listening to young people talk about their fears and aspirations.


Some of the young Italians who are interviewed in “Futura,” a documentary by Pietro Marcello, Francesco Munzi and Alice Rohrwacher.
By A.O. SCOTT

Food! Glorious Food!

Coronavirus Updates
Sarah Palin, who is unvaccinated, recently dined indoors in New York City before testing positive.
By PRIYA KRISHNA

New York Restaurant Won’t Face City Scrutiny for Admitting Sarah Palin
Elio’s let the former Alaska governor eat indoors despite a city rule that it ask for proof she was vaccinated. She wasn’t.
By PRIYA KRISHNA

Vegan Travel: It’s Not Fringe Anymore
From Mexico to Greece, plant-centric hotels, restaurants and tours are proliferating.
By ELAINE GLUSAC

How the Air Fryer Crisped Its Way Into America’s Heart
Though the device is sold as a way to make foods crunchy without deep-frying, home cooks have put it to countless other uses — and fed a billion-dollar business.
By CHRISTINA MORALES

Lots of Love for This Tomato Soup
Ali Slagle’s recipe is pantry-friendly and rich with garlicky flavor.


Tomato and White Bean Soup With Lots of Garlic
By Emily Weinstein

COOKING CLASS
A Soup That Roxane Gay Actually Enjoys
Soups aren’t always the author’s thing. But this tomato one, especially when paired with a grilled cheese sandwich, is just that good.


Mayonnaise on one side of the sandwich gives it “that really nice golden, toasted look,” Gay says.
By NANCY COLEMAN

Vegetable Soups for the Soul
These three vegetable-dense soups are the perfect antidote to January’s dreariness.
By TEJAL RAO

A French 75 for Everyone
Thanks to a deeply flavored citrus shrub, this classic cocktail can be adapted for those who are drinking, want something lighter, or who are fully abstaining from alcohol.

Let these no-A.B.V., low-A.B.V. and classic takes on French 75s be the stars of your next cocktail hour.
Let these no-A.B.V., low-A.B.V. and classic takes on French 75s be the stars of your next cocktail hour.
By Rebekah Peppler

Food! Glorious Food!

America’s Next Great Restaurants Are in the Suburbs. But Can They Thrive There?
With a shift in demographics and tastes, chefs are finding an unexpected home for their ambitious cuisine.
By PRIYA KRISHNA

CULINARY ARTS
The Coffee Maker
James Hoffmann is one of the most followed men in caffeine. Here’s an illustrated look at how he became an expert.
By Rachel WhartonIllustrations by Koren Shadmi

A GOOD APPETITE
Counter the Winter Chill With This Farro and Gruyère Gratin
Melissa Clark takes earthy grains and bakes them with caramelized mushrooms and loads of cheese for a satisfying meatless meal.


Round out this gratin with a crisp green salad, or serve it as a rich side dish alongside chicken or fish.
By Melissa Clark

The Remarkable Versatility of Broccoli
There’s a lot to love about this big green vegetable.
By TEJAL RAO

Lentils You’re Loving
Lidey Heuck’s recipe, with sweet potatoes and spinach, is inspired by dal, but run through with Thai elements.


By EMILY WEINSTEIN

The Fish That Comes With a Year of Good Luck
A Hawaiian specialty cooked the way a local has been making it for 25 years.


By LIGAYA MISHAN

11 One-Pot Winner-Winner Chicken Dinners
Because no one needs more dishes to wash.


By MARGAUX LASKEY

FRONT BURNER
A Biography About Argentina’s Most Famous Red Grape
“Malbec Mon Amour,” written by two directors at the Bodega Catena Zapata winery in Mendoza, tells the story of a grape that likes to travel.


“Malbec Mon Amour” by Laura Catena and Alejandro Vigil (Catapulta Editores, $24.99).
By FLORENCE FABRICANT

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THE POUR
20 Under $20: Beckoning Bottles in the Dead of Winter
These 20 wines are not from the most famous regions. But they are great values and, most important, delicious.


By Eric Asimov

Ed Schoenfeld, Impresario of Chinese Cuisine, Dies at 72
He helped introduce New Yorkers to the breadth of Chinese regional food with a series of top-rated Manhattan restaurants in the 1970s and ’80s.

Ed Schoenfeld in 2012. In New York in the 1970s and ’80s, he became a highly visible interpreter and spokesman for the food culture of China, terra incognita for most Americans at the time.
Ed Schoenfeld in 2012. In New York in the 1970s and ’80s, he became a highly visible interpreter and spokesman for the food culture of China, terra incognita for most Americans at the time.
By William Grimes