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Fearlessness in the Kitchen šŖ
SB158
Welcome to Secret Breakfast / An exclusive newsletter, the best place to start your day with fearlessness, Garbage Plates and Melonpans
Hi there!
Imagine youāre in a beautiful garden, taking a break from the everyday life. What would you notice at first?*
Would you measure how tall the trees are, how many different flower species are around you and how many acres are around you?
Would you smell the air, touch the herbs or listen to the birdās songs?
I often use this exercise to figure out the person I have before me and tell if Iām dealing with science or spirit, mind or feelings, Apollonian or Dionysian, salad with separate condiments or piping hot Shepherdās Pie.
Itās a silly simplification - I know - but 9 times out of 10, this thing works. I know for sure Iād love to work with the first kind, and Iād have a great time with the second.
Piero
PS: if that reminded you Persian Letters by Charles de Montesquieu, youāre absolutely right.
Photo by ROMAN ODINTSOV
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THE BEST QUOTE
ā¦ Elizabeth Zott is the main character of the TV show Lessons in Chemistry, based on the novel of the same name by Bonnie Garmus (which, Iām told, is far better than the show).
ā
THE MISSING INGREDIENT
HUNGRY FOR A DOPPELGĆNGER
Tamales (ā recipe) vs. Zongzi. Garbage Plates (ā recipe) vs. Loco Mocos. Conchas vs. Melonpan (ā recipe). The worldās a kitchen and, sometimes, different countries, with very different histories, reach the very same recipe.
This Atlas Obscura feature - Ever Spotted a DoppelgƤnger Food? - made me think I must have encountered a DoppelgƤnger Food many times, but canāt recall. And you?
Picture: Sakuraco
ā
THE BOOK
An Appetite for Words
ā ā ā ā ā
This bookās tagline is āOn Eating, Reading, Reading about Eating, and Eating While Readingā and it sums up 85% of what I like of my life (when I have the time to live it). The author is The New York Times book critic Dwight Garner and he wrote a memoir stuffed with literary excerpts about hunger, food, and the sense of enjoying the time on this Earth. I had the possibility to read that in advance (thank you G.!) and I consider it a no-brainer: get it, read it, and, sooner or later, youāll come back to it. Well, it probably lacks some feminine soul, but youāre buying the life of a guy named Dwight, after all.
The Upstairs Delicatessen by Dwight Garner
ā Shortplot: šļø š š· š
ā OnlyPans
This is where Secret Breakfast picks juicy content from food creators
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RANDOM ACTS OF HUNGER
This is the space where I share some food (un)related stuff of my week
šļøHannah Goldfieldās Favorite Restaurants in New York City šAn Orange Cake From a Revolutionary Chef (ā recipe) šA silly Twitter-thread about food puns and IA art š”Thailand's Bizarre Cafe Where Customers Dined In Ankle-Deep Water Filled With Fish šØ Roasted-Buckwheat Custards, with soba-cha tea (ā recipe) š„The Egg - A Short Story by Andy Weir (I loved Project Hail Mary), animated by Kurzgesagt šEverything You Did Not Know About Watermelons šIn the West Bank, Palestinians Preserve Grapes and Tradition šThe Best Food Books to Read This Fall š°š·Budae Jjigae, a Korean War-era staple š”Top 50 productivity hacks chosen by internet šFor her first Bon AppĆ©tit Editorās Letter Jamila Robinson wrote a paean to the MacānāCheese (note for the Italians here: in the US that is considered a side dish)
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FOOD FOR LATER
Who Killed the Fudge King?
Tom Donaghy / Atavist
āThe fudge (ā recipe) sold at Copper Kettle was so creamy, so sweet, so beyond compare, that many candy shops on the Ocean City boardwalk didnāt even sell fudge, because there was no pointā. Hereās a story with the following ingredients: a killing, homosexuality, the Sixties and 43 occurrences of the word āfudgeā.
ā¤ Last week's most clicked link was about the 700-plus songs known to give people chills. Should I pivot to a lifestyle newsletter? And that's all for today.