Helen Russell and Brooke McDonnell of Equator Coffees and Tea got into the coffee business fifteen years ago with two retail coffee shops in San Francisco and Oakland. After three years of rising with the sun, they decided it was time to switch gears. They wanted to have more control over the roasting process and be transparent about the way it was done--something that wasn't happening in the industry at the time. More
Flying cupcakes, rogue banana pops, a sleeping nook behind the refrigerator ... where on earth is this kitchen?! It depends on who you ask. Yummyclare, the kooky character who lives in this kitchen, and the kids (and adults) who are obsessed with her cooking show would tell you it's located between the walls of the little girl Una's house. A less imaginative, yet equally splendid, answer would be that it's inside Clare Crespo's Los Angeles garage. Either way, this is one enchanting place.
Boulevard Beer has just hit its 20th anniversary here in Kansas City, Missouri. They started out small and have grown over the last two decades, to be the largest craft brewer in the Midwest and largest independently owned brewery in Missouri. We only have one conflict with this local beverage institution and that's between which is more beautiful, the beer they make — or the actual brewery itself. Join us for a tour!
One of the benefits to living in the Midwest is being able to witness the amazing skill and artistry that goes into the competitive art of smoking meats. Every October, fleets of vehicles pulling smokers of all shapes and sizes pour into our city and the year's best smelling party and competition takes place. This year we brought our camera so we could give you a tour.
We seem to spend a lot of time bemoaning the state of food in America. There's so much that isn't the way it ought to be that sometimes we forget to celebrate and appreciate places that are producing food in creatively sustainable ways. One of those places is Snowville Creamery in southeast Ohio. We visited Snowville to bring you a peek at a dairy that is doing things right. Take a quick trip with us to this tiny creamery; you'll see a few herds of happy, healthy, sociable cows, and an owner who is practically a force of nature himself.
We don't do restaurant reviews or restaurant chatter here at The Kitchn. We focus on the ways that home cooking can transform your home into an even more nourishing space. But what happens if your passion for food overflows? What if you want to make your table bigger — big enough to feed a neighborhood?
That's what happened to Molly of Orangette and her husband, Brandon. They extended their kitchen table into one big enough to fill a restaurant called Delancey, which is opening tonight. And we have just a little peek for you. More
Something's brewing in NYC's Nolita. Hidden away down a narrow flight of concrete steps off Lafayette St. is Pravda, an atmospheric Russian bar-bistro. Infused with the rich, warm tones of well-worn wood and old leather, and accented with earthy reds, Pravda's Old World style doesn't end with the decor. Earlier this week, I visited their bar kitchen to find out more...
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This being Ice Cream Month and all, we wanted to focus on the ingredients and producers that let us make this sweet creamy treat. So today we have another sort of treat for you: a tour of a dairy farm!
One of the best ways to spend a Saturday afternoon in London is to crowd into bookstore/café Books for Cooks, a Notting Hill institution where you can browse thousands of international cookbooks and grab one of a handful of café tables to sample daily changing light meals cooked up in the open test kitchen in the back. By the time we got there at 2 pm on a recent Saturday, they were down to their last slice of coconut cake. But French owner Eric Treuillé, who runs the place with his English wife Rosie Kindersley, poured us a glass of biodynamic wine from his small vineyard in the Southwest of France, and talked about this irresistible oasis for the cookbook lover that it seems to us every city should have.
Clotilde Dusoulier started her popular Paris-based English-language food blog Chocolate & Zucchini in 2003, but she first got interested in cooking while living in Northern California, and her young modern sensibility has won her many a fan abroad and more recently at home, where her blog is now translated into French. Her first book, the Chocolate & Zucchini cookbook, was published last year.
Out today is her latest book, Clotilde's Edible Adventures in Paris, a personal guidebook on where to eat, drink and shop for food in Paris. To celebrate, she let The Kitchn tag along to some of her favorite food shops in the Montmartre neighborhood where she lives... More

































Floral Drink Dispen...
