Joystiq has you covered with all things Metal Gear Solid 4!

The New York Times Dining & Wine section in 60 seconds: Mocktails, tomato jam, raspberry figs

tomato jam
Eric Asimov discusses the new breed of lighter, subtler Napa Valley Cabernets.

Applebee's moves beyond the riblet in an effort to save itself from Bennigan's fate.

The Hamptons get real Mexican-style tacos. Yay?

The Minimalist makes tomato jam.

Recipes for icy summer mocktails. And not just virgin daiquiris - think homemade tonic with lavender, chamomile, fresh herbs and lime juice.

Meet the raspberry fig.

The New York Times Dining & Wine section in 60 seconds: Snobbery, specialty coffee, slow-cooked beans

waiters at waverly inn
Vanity Fair's Graydon Carter picks up his second restaurant, Monkey Bar. His first, the Waverly Inn, has been luring a high wattage crowd for two years, despite not being officially open.

L.A.'s fast food moratorium raises questions about choice and personal responsibility.

The Minimalist makes chapati, Indian flat bread.

A recipe for slow-cooked green beans.

Eric Asimov sips the crisp white wines of Spain.

Specialty coffee roasters hit New York.

The New York Times in 60 seconds: Ice, white wine and apricots

farmers
The Curious Cook discusses cooking with cold - liquid nitrogen-chilled foams, inside-out pancakes cooked on the icy "anti-griddle."

Eric Asimov sips the white wines of Greece.

Supermarkets add more varieties of fruits and veggies, to compete with farmers markets.

The Greenmarket debates grower rules.

China temporarily allows shipments of California strawberries. Strawberry shortcakes for all gold medalists!

Honey-apricot parfaits, with recipe.

The New York Times in 60 seconds: Beijing, Bordeaux and banned from the greenmarket

woman in mall pouring ketchup on chinese foodCan't make it to the Olympics this year? Go for some authentic Beijing cuisine in Flushing, Queens instead.

Eric Asimov does "forgotten" white Bordeaux.

A farmer is kicked out of the farmer's market for selling meat he didn't raise on his own farm.

The Minimalist makes rice salads.

Old-school bar guides are coming back in print.

A recipe for Cuban-style pork.

The New York Times in 60 seconds: Soft-serve, Slow Food and cheesecake

soft serve ice cream
Soft-serve gets a makeover at upscale ice cream joints. Think spiced cantaloupe topping, balsalmic cherries, a "creamsicle" of white nectarine granita and jasmine tea soft-serve.

The Slow Food movement plans a Labor Day Slow Food Nation festival, to be the "Woodstock" of food festivals. Hope they bring more porta-potties than the original.

The Rutgers Tomato Project brings back the Jersey tomato.

The Minimalist does a no-bake summer cheesecake with blueberries.

Some New Yorkers are apparently unable or unwilling to leave their own neighborhoods for dinner.

Wasabi fudge, lavender caramels, blue cheese truffles.

The New York Times Dining & Wine section in 60 seconds: burgers, barbecue skewers, Big Easy cocktails

burgers
Cheeseburgers are popping up in the three-star restaurants of Paris. Quelle Horreur!

Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic: Sliders are invading New York!

iPhone's Urban Spoon program will tell you where to eat.

Which is the definitive Big Easy cocktail - the sazerac or the Ramos gin fizz? Eric Asimov ponders.

The Minimalist makes rosemary branches into barbecue skewers. The Minimalist is the MacGuyver of the kitchen, isn't he?

Make snail butter, without the snail.

The New York Times in 60 seconds: Chocolate chip cookies, cold soup, Sweetmobiles

chocolate chips cookies
Chocolate chip cookies are magic. Especially when warm. And sprinkled with sea salt.

Jim Mamary and Alan Harding were Brooklyn restaurant pioneers, opening a dozen restaurants in the past decade. But now people are mad because they say their restaurants are chains. Chains are bad. Yuppie fight!

If the above item makes you roll your eyes at New York, consider this: the city has roaming "Sweetmobiles" serving cookies, hot waffles, and crème brûlée. I heart New York indeed.

Eric Asimov gives poor, maligned dry sherry some love.

The Minimalist does cold soup.

A recipe for a pea and raw squash salad.

Fried milk. Cool. See for yourself.

The Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog-Eating Contest

Philadelphia Magazine writer Jason Fagone spent one year profiling some of the most divinely outsized personalities in the world of competitive eating. While Akron house painter Coondog O'Karma makes a midlife grab at glory via rapid-fire pizza consumption, Bill "El Wingador" Simmons attempts to reclaim Wong Bowl supremacy from 90lb Sonya "Black Widow" Thomas, and day trader Tim Janus dons the mantle of the mysterious Eater X, it all comes down to one shared hunger. They all want to win the Mustard Yellow Belt of International Hot Dog Eating Supremacy back from the Japanese who'd dominated the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog-Eating Contest nearly every year since 1997.

Back in July of 2001, that would mean beating the record of 25 1/8 set the previous year by Kazutoyo "The Rabbit" Arai.

That was before Takeru Kobayashi's 50 Dog Day.

Read an excerpt from Jason Fagone's Horsemen of the Esophagus on AOL Food

The New York Times Dining & Wine section in 60 seconds: Picnics, rooftops, jerks

picnic table
The Minimalist gives us 101 20-minute picnic ideas. Cold peanut noodles! Savory lentil salad! Cheese balls with fresh herbs! Thanks, Minimalist!

Jamaican jerk: an underrated form of barbecue. I agree.

Cold red wine? Eric Asimov says it's OK. So it must be OK.

Newsflash: rooftop dining is nice. But sometimes your napkins blow off the roof. Uh oh!

A book review of 'Beyond the Great Wall,' about Chinese dishes little known in the U.S.

Poor Jeff Varasano, lately of Atlanta, tries to answer the eternal question of why New York pizza is never good outside of New York. Godspeed, dude.

Fruit crisps: why are they never crisp? With recipe.

New York is trying to get more veggie food carts on the street

A food cart that is carrying pineapples and bags of grapefruits.
Boy, the mayor and city council of New York City really want you to eat healthily. First they banned trans fats, then they made restaurants post calorie counts on menus, now they're making a push to get more vegetables on the streets.

New York is getting ready to issue about 500 licenses to food carts that sell only fresh fruits and veggies. Mayor Bloomberg says that while he respects the hot dog cart as a New York institution, he hopes that the vegetable cart gets just as much respect. He also hopes that by making fresh fruits and vegetables more available, especially in lower income areas, New Yorkers will lose some weight and reduce skyrocketing levels of obesity-related diseases.

The move has its critics, of course. Mainly the critics say that just because the fresh produce is available doesn't mean people will it it. What do you think about New York's veggie cart plan?

The New York Times Dining & Wine section in 60 seconds: Summer drinks special

blenders
Special summer drinks guide: blender drinks. Do you know what goes into a 'Missionary's Downfall?'

Wine critic Eric Asimov goes virgin with a root beer review.

The Minimalist talks modern mixed drinks. Kamikaze, anyone?

The Croque-Monsiur, France's answer to the ham and cheese, is the perfect bar food.

Forget the kegerator. Real brewski lovers have beer cellars.


Midnight Sausage: Brooklyn, NY


Sopressata at Esposito & Sons in Brooklyn, NY from Flickr user j bary's Flickr.

I'm posting images of sausage counters the world over each weeknight (and occasionally weekend) witching hour until I run out. Please use the comments section to post links to your Flickr or personal site faves, and perhaps you'll see 'em posted here late some evening.

Previously-- Midnight Sausage: The Bronx

Mainely Food Pics: Mussel Car



I always thought that a muscle car was a hot rod from the late 60's- early 70's until I was driving around my old haunts of Rockland, Maine yesterday researching and shooting an article and saw this impressive Mussel Car.

That looks like it was the remains of a tasty lobster, clam, and mussel bake. Or maybe it washed up on the beach after a Nor'easter. Either way that's one heck of a vehicle. I wonder how many shellfish power it is? Does it get dive bombed by hungry gulls? Does it belongs to the offspring of Neptune's many affairs with mortals? If I follow, will it lead to a huge vat of steaming Mussel's Provence? Inquiring minds want to know.

Ramp pesto recipe



For reasons I've yet to understand (perhaps in recompense for my obsessive heirloom veggie gardening), the food fates smiled upon me today. I reached into the crisper drawer for a bunch of scallions, and instead drew out (gasp!) ramps -- still viable, even though my last foraging adventure was several weeks ago, and ramp season is gone, daddy gone. They weren't 100% cook 'em up and eat 'em with nothing else fresh, though, so I hedged my bets and went with a fave of mine -- ramp pesto. Should you not be similarly gifted by the veggie gods, garlic scapes work well, too.

Continue reading Ramp pesto recipe

The New York Times Dining & Wine section in 60 seconds: Apricots, green garlic, the mini-Minimalist

apricot trees
A festival of scrapes/green garlic - the flower shoots of the garlic bulb - featuring green garlic dip, green garlic souffle, penne with green garlic and pancetta, chicken with green garlic aioli. Lots of recipes!

Picking the food for your same-sex wedding reception? A lot like picking the food for your heterosexual wedding reception. Who would have guessed?

The White Lily flour plant is moving from Knoxville to the midwest after 125 years; Southern bakers are freaking out that their biscuits won't ever be the same.

The Minimalist makes paletas, Mexican-style popsicles, with the adorable mini-Minimalist.

Eric Asimov discusses the brunello di Montalcino scandal, wherein unapproved grapes went into the wine.

David Karp, the Fruit Detective, talks apricots. Try the ultra-sweet CandyCot.

Next Page >

Tip of the Day

Have you ever wondered what you should do with leftover eggs? Whether they're whole or just a white or yolk is left, consider freezing them.

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