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The cookbooks bringing us joy and changing our lives in the kitchen this spring

The cookbooks bringing us joy and changing our lives in the kitchen this spring

Spring's parade of cookbooks are bringing a lot of joy into our kitchens. We read, cooked and baked our way through dozens of them, finding respite in some newfound culinary wisdom. Ace L.A. baker Nicole Rucker of Fat + Flour gave us recipes from her new book for London Fog brownies and her signature vegan lemon lavender cookies, using simplified methods that turned her baking world around. Ari Kolender, the chef whose East Hollywood raw bar Found Oyster won us over with pristine seafood and clam shack charm, wrote 'How to Cook the Finest Things in the Sea' and helped us feel comfortable cooking all kinds of fish and shellfish. And along with chefs and other food lovers, we explored our own lived-in libraries, highlighting the cookbooks that have meant the most to us, the ones we most cherish, each for our own reasons. Here's what we're dog-earing right now.
THE RECIPES
THE RECIPES
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SPQR Goes Raw
SPQR Goes Raw

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SPQR Goes Raw

The restaurant from chef Matthew Accarrino adds a weekend raw bar with seafood offerings Jun 23, 2025, 6:59 PM UTC SPQR is known for its pastas and Italian dishes, but now the Lower Pac Heights restaurant will feature a new offering dubbed The Bar by Accarrino's, per SFist. On weekends from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., a menu will highlight raw bar classics such as oysters, crudo, and hush puppies; there will also be mussel soup and a 'hot shellfish donut,' plus a half-ounce white sturgeon caviar option if you're feeling spendy. Coffee options will also be available — as well as non-seafood-based, powdered or cinnamon-sugar doughnuts — plus Negronis, mimosas, beer, and house wines by the glass or carafe. SFist also caught the news that Sushi Zone on Market Street will close as of Saturday, July 12. The restaurant has been a staple at 1815 Market Street for 28 years, and a Facebook post from the restaurant states that the landlord 'decided not to renew our lease, making us leave the space we've called home for nearly three decades.' The post goes on to say that the closure is 'just a pause' as the owners look for a new location for the business. The new Bingo Street Cafe opened the week of June 16, the San Francisco Business Times reports, pouring specialty lattes, matcha drinks, and chai at 225 Bush Street, the former location of a Bluestone Lane cafe. The menu features some South Indian touches to the drinks, per the Times , with Mysore filtered coffee, turmeric lattes sweetened with jaggery, and ginger cardamom chai. A second location is allegedly in the works, but the Times was not able to confirm with the owners prior to publish. This summer, the restaurant group behind Flour + Water will host a trio of acclaimed West Coast restaurants in San Francisco for a guest chef dinner series. First up is a collab with Portland's Xiao Ye, with chef Louis Lin and partner Jolyn Chen joining the Flour + Water team for a dinner on Tuesday, July 15. Diners can expect dishes such as khao soi-inspired pasta or kanpachi crudo with strawberry rhubarb nuoc cham, per a press release, with the dinner running $139 per person with optional wine pairings for $65 (reservations are available via Resy). Next up, the team behind Bar Le Cote in Los Olivos will pop up at Penny Roma on Monday, August 4, with a third yet-to-be-revealed dinner collab at Flour + Water Pizzeria set for October.

'Weird Al' Yankovic Reveals the Huge Singer Who Would 'Never' Approve a Musical Parody
'Weird Al' Yankovic Reveals the Huge Singer Who Would 'Never' Approve a Musical Parody

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

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'Weird Al' Yankovic Reveals the Huge Singer Who Would 'Never' Approve a Musical Parody

While stopping by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on June 9, "Weird Al" Yankovic revealed that the one singer who would "never" approve a parody — Prince He said that he even pitched the late singer a parody of his song "1999," and the "Purple Rain" singer was so uninterested that he didn't even reply Yankovic noted that Prince was seemingly a fan of his music though, particularly his parody of Michael Jackson's song "Bad""Weird Al" Yankovic has performed parodies of hits from the likes of Michael Jackson, Elton John and Madonna, but there is one artist who turned him down. During a Monday, June 9 appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, the 65-year-old musician revealed that he had tried to get Prince to approve several parodies, but was never successful. He explained that the "Purple Rain" hitmaker "is like the one guy that was never into it." "He's got a good sense of humor," Yankovic added, saying that he'd "heard a bootleg recording of him in the studio talking to some friends" about Yankovic's late-'80s parody of Jackson's song "Bad," which he titled "Fat." In the clip, Prince reportedly said that the song and its accompanying video were "really funny." "But when it came to parodying one of his songs, not so much. I had like a half a dozen ideas that I pitched him, and none of them got accepted," Yankovic recalled. There was one he was particularly excited about — a comical take on Prince's song "1999," which he wanted to title "$19.99." It was inspired by the idea of late-night infomercials, but Prince was not interested. He didn't even respond to the offer. Prince died at the age of 57 in 2016. However, Yankovic won't even attempt to spoof him at this point. "I try to respect the wishes of the artists," he said. "And he still made... He made his wishes very, very clear while he was with us." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Yankovic might not have had luck with Prince, but he previously spoke very highly of Jackson, who he told Rolling Stone was very receptive to his ideas and had "always been very supportive." In fact, the "Smooth Criminal" performer enjoyed the parodies so much that he allowed Yankovic to record the music video for "Fat" on a subway set. "The first time I met him in person was long after I had gotten permission to do 'Eat It' back in 1984. There's a contract somewhere that has his signature next to mine, proving that we are the co-writers of 'Eat It,' which is surrealistic in and of itself," Yankovic recalled. He continued: "The first time I actually ran into him was backstage at one of his concerts, this was maybe four years later, when Even Worse came out with my second parody, 'Fat.' I went backstage, and he was seeing a lot of people, but I brought along a gold record of Even Worse to present to him, and he was very gracious and thanked me for it and said some nice things." Yankovic revealed one song that Jackson "wasn't quite so into" having him cover — "Black or White." "He thought 'Black or White' was more of a message song, and he didn't feel as comfortable with a parody of that one, which I completely understood," he said, adding: "In a way, he did me a huge favor, because I was already getting pegged as the guy who did Michael Jackson parodies, and because he wasn't so into it, I decided to go with Nirvana, which wound up revitalizing my career." Read the original article on People

'Weird Al' Yankovic Reveals the Huge Singer Who Would 'Never' Approve a Musical Parody
'Weird Al' Yankovic Reveals the Huge Singer Who Would 'Never' Approve a Musical Parody

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Yahoo

'Weird Al' Yankovic Reveals the Huge Singer Who Would 'Never' Approve a Musical Parody

While stopping by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on June 9, "Weird Al" Yankovic revealed that the one singer who would "never" approve a parody — Prince He said that he even pitched the late singer a parody of his song "1999," and the "Purple Rain" singer was so uninterested that he didn't even reply Yankovic noted that Prince was seemingly a fan of his music though, particularly his parody of Michael Jackson's song "Bad""Weird Al" Yankovic has performed parodies of hits from the likes of Michael Jackson, Elton John and Madonna, but there is one artist who turned him down. During a Monday, June 9 appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, the 65-year-old musician revealed that he had tried to get Prince to approve several parodies, but was never successful. He explained that the "Purple Rain" hitmaker "is like the one guy that was never into it." "He's got a good sense of humor," Yankovic added, saying that he'd "heard a bootleg recording of him in the studio talking to some friends" about Yankovic's late-'80s parody of Jackson's song "Bad," which he titled "Fat." In the clip, Prince reportedly said that the song and its accompanying video were "really funny." "But when it came to parodying one of his songs, not so much. I had like a half a dozen ideas that I pitched him, and none of them got accepted," Yankovic recalled. There was one he was particularly excited about — a comical take on Prince's song "1999," which he wanted to title "$19.99." It was inspired by the idea of late-night infomercials, but Prince was not interested. He didn't even respond to the offer. Prince died at the age of 57 in 2016. However, Yankovic won't even attempt to spoof him at this point. "I try to respect the wishes of the artists," he said. "And he still made... He made his wishes very, very clear while he was with us." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Yankovic might not have had luck with Prince, but he previously spoke very highly of Jackson, who he told Rolling Stone was very receptive to his ideas and had "always been very supportive." In fact, the "Smooth Criminal" performer enjoyed the parodies so much that he allowed Yankovic to record the music video for "Fat" on a subway set. "The first time I met him in person was long after I had gotten permission to do 'Eat It' back in 1984. There's a contract somewhere that has his signature next to mine, proving that we are the co-writers of 'Eat It,' which is surrealistic in and of itself," Yankovic recalled. He continued: "The first time I actually ran into him was backstage at one of his concerts, this was maybe four years later, when Even Worse came out with my second parody, 'Fat.' I went backstage, and he was seeing a lot of people, but I brought along a gold record of Even Worse to present to him, and he was very gracious and thanked me for it and said some nice things." Yankovic revealed one song that Jackson "wasn't quite so into" having him cover — "Black or White." "He thought 'Black or White' was more of a message song, and he didn't feel as comfortable with a parody of that one, which I completely understood," he said, adding: "In a way, he did me a huge favor, because I was already getting pegged as the guy who did Michael Jackson parodies, and because he wasn't so into it, I decided to go with Nirvana, which wound up revitalizing my career." Read the original article on People

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