fox.game Bright Flavors, Easy Dinners

 manila368    |      2025-01-06 04:23
ImageNancy Silverton’s flattened chicken thighs with roasted lemon slices, adapted by Julia Moskin.Credit...Melina Hammer for The New York Times

Hello! Julia again, filling in for Sam.

At the midpoint of these winter holidays, everyone needs some simple, savory food to recover from the delightful excesses of salt and sweet in cookies, bacalao, lasagna, mole, jelly doughnuts, and on and on. New Year’s Eve blowout dinners are in the works — I’m making Vivian Chan-Tam’s hot and sour soup — but at the moment I am strangely drawn to cumin-lime shrimp with ginger, lemon pesto pasta and white bean dip with chile-cumin oil. They’re all big-flavored, quick and built on pantry and freezer staples.

The easiest main I know is a skillet full of Nancy Silverton’s slow-roasted chicken thighs, which you put in a heavy pan over low heat with lemon slices, and then get the rest of the meal together while the fat renders and the skin crisps. It goes with virtually anything you can think up, but pairs especially well with a grain salad.

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Flattened Chicken Thighs With Roasted Lemon Slices

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But we’re not done with sweets just yet. I grew up in thrall to the After Eight mint and the folds of its darkly elegant wrapper — so different from boringly nut-colored Snickers and Milky Ways and the crackly cellophane of Jolly Ranchers. With no idea what “After Eight” might connote, I still understood that the combo of dark chocolate and strong mint was a more provocative version of my favorite mint chocolate chip ice cream. Caroline Schiff’s new layered chocolate mint bars play into those nostalgic peppermint flavors of winter.

Combined with the effort by Congress to force TikTok to cut its ties with its Chinese ownersfox.game, the initiative is a major addition to the administration’s efforts to seal off what it views as major cybervulnerabilities for the United States. But the effort has, in effect, begun to drop a digital iron curtain between the world’s two largest economies, which only two decades ago were declaring that the internet would bind them together.