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25 Must-Download Web-Only Recipes from Gourmet.com

Savory Duck Fat Doughnuts. Photo: Gourmet.com.

Some of the most notable "Gourmet" recipes never made it to the magazine. Through its 69-year run, the magazine's food editors and test kitchen staff developed hundreds of adventurous, experimental, personal and just plain luscious recipes that for one reason or another escaped the print edition. With Gourmet.com's 2008 launch, multimedia supplements to magazine features, test kitchen video throw-downs, staffers' favorites and perusals of family archives afforded the opportunity to showcase Web-exclusive content, and a chance to serve up these recipes to their more cyber-savvy readers.

Though an Oct. 13 Tweet by the magazine's Executive Editor John Willoughby advised followers to "Go to gourmet.com, copy Web-exclusive recipes that will disappear: strawberry dumpling, banana upside down cake, curried pork noodles, etc.", Slashfood has been told by other Condé Nast insiders that after the magazine's recent, sudden shuttering, the future of Gourmet.com content remains uncertain, save for mag-published recipes that will be migrated to sister site Epicurious.com.

We're not taking any chances. We've clicked our way through 300-plus Web-exclusive recipes from October 2005 to September 2009 to find the 25 you simply must copy, paste and collect before they're (possibly) lost to the ages.

1. Frozen Peanut Butter Pie with Candied Bacon
Recipe by Andrea Albin

2. Potted Stuffed Squab
Recipe by Edna Lewis

3. Confit Gizzard with Honey Mustard
Recipe by Ian Knauer

4. Savory Duck Fat Doughnuts
Recipe by Ian Knauer

Get more recipes -- including Dijon ice cream and zucchini whoopie pies -- after the jump.
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Filed under: Magazines, Tinfoil Swan

Apples, Ashmead and Amalia - The Los Angeles Times in 60 Seconds

kernel apples

Kernel apples. Source: LoopZilla, Flickr.

  • Ashmead's Kernel apples may not be pretty, but they have "the most intense, complex flavor of any fruit in the world."
  • Harvest whites for the season include Hungary's Tokaj and Italy's Campania.
  • The ins, outs and tasty recipes for Chinese Bao -- "chewy-soft" steamed and stuffed buns.
  • Los Angeles has a lot of new dining spots in the works, ranging from a second location for Umami Burger to the upcoming Cafe Habana.
  • Restaurants: Venice's AK has become the Tasting Kitchen, with a "magic chef" and hunger-inducing dishes, and LA's Amalia morphs rustic Guatemalan cooking into "urbane cuisine."
  • The end of Gourmet, and more love for the fallen mag.

Filed under: In Sixty Seconds

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Gourmet Sandwich Makers Mourning Loss of Mag



Even sandwich artists are mourning the loss of Gourmet Magazine.

[Via Twitter]

Filed under: Magazines, Fast Food

L.L. Bean, Brooklyn and Bells - The New York Times in 60 Seconds


fried chicken
Fried chicken.
Photo: thebittenword.com, Flickr
  • Fried chicken goes international, from Creole to Korean kitchens.
  • L.L. Bean heiress Linda L. Bean gets ready to mass market Maine lobsters and end Canadian lobster dependence.
  • A look at "Top Chef" hostess Padma Lakshmi's Sunday routine.
  • Jewish delis are suffering from waning popularity, and those that are left struggle to keep the meaty magic alive.
  • The end of Gourmet magazine after almost 70 years, and those mourning its demise.
  • The dangers of E. Coli and pre-ground beef, and the story of Stephanie Smith.
  • When cooking becomes boring, A Good Appetite suggests playing "cupboard roulette."
  • The Minimalist makes a crustless, Pan-Baked Lemon-Almond Tart.
  • Joining old Italian pros as they chop, stew and jar plum tomatoes in prime autumn tradition.
  • Cooking with Dexter finally learns the artificial flavor of the fast food beneath the golden arches.
  • Rogacki is "a temple devoted" to Berlin deli fare, in West Berlin, Germany.
  • Restaurant: After 10 years, Brooklyn's Saul has only gotten better, Queens' Engeline is a rare slice of Filipino fare and the Lower East Side's Ten Bells mixes wine and charcuterie.
  • Food Stuff finds R.W. Apple Jr.'s new book, SoHo crepes and Saratoga chips.
  • New York's openings and closings and food calendar.

Filed under: In Sixty Seconds

Gourmet Magazine to Close

Photo: Sara Bonisteel

After nearly 69 years of good tastes, Gourmet Magazine will close after its November issue, the New York Times reports.

The magazine, owned by Conde Nast, has been published since December 1940. Cookie, Modern Bride and Elegant Bride are also slated for closure, the paper said.

"Thank you all SO much for this outpouring of support," Ruth Reichl, the magazine's editor in chief, said Monday afternoon on Twitter. "It means a lot. Sorry not to be posting now, but I'm packing. We're all stunned, sad."

The cuts come after a three-month study by McKinsey & Co., which looked at the publishing company's costs, the Times said.

In an e-mail obtained by Gawker, Conde Nast CEO Chuck Townsend said Gourmet will live on through television and books. "Gourmet magazine will cease monthly publication, but we will remain committed to the brand, retaining Gourmet's book publishing and television programming, and Gourmet recipes on Epicurious.com," he wrote. "We will concentrate our publishing activities in the epicurean category on Bon Appétit."

Drew Schutte, a senior vice president at Conde Nast Digital, said Gourmet.com would "remain up at least through the end of the year," Mediaite reports.

Sources tell Slashfood that staff has to be out of building by the end of day Tuesday.

Leave your thoughts about Gourmet's demise in the comments below.

[Via New York Times]

Filed under: Magazines, Food News

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