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The Great Culinary Horoscope of 2025 ✨
It's issue 300!
Welcome to Secret Breakfast / An exclusive newsletter, the best place to start expressing your disgust for leap years, cooking the latest Thanksgiving bits, and then reading what’s written in the stars
© Miller Family Trust A, Getty Museum
Hi there!
It’s a superstition that leap years are somehow unfortunate. And, how can I say it? For me this 2024 sucked.
There was no major event, but it’s been a collection of bad days, unexpected things happening, and small (and big) troubles.
But Thanksgiving is coming, and I think we all could use a moment to express gratitude to people who made things easier or joyful—why not?
Don’t miss that chance.
I’ll start by saying thank you to you, dear reader.
—
Now enjoy issue 300, it’s different.
Piero
ONE ✤ QUOTE
✦ Annie Mueller, Burn, Build, Bridge (a hell of a blog post).
This is the space where I share some food (un)related stuff of my week
🥧Clementine Ricotta Cheesecake With Cranberry Compote Recipe (★recipe) 💔The neuroscience of heartbreak 📖The Best Cookbooks of 2024, According to Food & Wine Editors 🍽️Eater’s Best New Restaurants in America in 2024 🥔5 Chef Tricks for the Best Mashed Potatoes 🦃Your Podcast for Thanksgiving: Alison Roman and comedian Kate Berlant (video) 🍞Super Soft Sourdough Rolls (★recipe) 🍔The 25 Recipes That Changed It All in American Cooking Over the Past 100 Years
Let’s be clear. No one here can predict the future, but I can use the Internet and experiment with technology. That's how I used the AI chatbot Claude to imagine what 2025 will be like.
It said the future would be wonderful and tasty (and full of exclamation points!).
Then I played with Canva, borrowed this Zoltar Fortune Teller Illustration, and here we go: 2025 is served.
Juicy content from food creators
“Our list, assembled from the suggestions of more than 60 chefs, recipe writers, historians, and culinary luminaries, serves as a pocket history of American home cooking over the past century. For me, a guy who loves trying new recipes but also tends to screw them up cooking the list was a crash course not only in American cuisine but in American expectations of home cooks”. |
Put a Fork in the Spork | Half spoon. Half fork. This flimsy hybrid utensil is cooked. |
➤ Last week's most clicked link was The 25 Most Influential Cookbooks of the Last 100 Years. And that's all for today.