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
Ken Albala / Zocalo

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.