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Chipotle's own staff slam first menu change in 5 years: 'Whoever approved this has broken taste buds'
Chipotle's own staff slam first menu change in 5 years: 'Whoever approved this has broken taste buds'

Daily Mail​

time10-06-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Chipotle's own staff slam first menu change in 5 years: 'Whoever approved this has broken taste buds'

Chipotle fans and employees are 'heavily disappointed' with the chain's newest sauce, Adobo Ranch. The chain's first new dip in five years, Adobo Ranch is a combination of sour cream, herbs, spices, and adobo pepper. It will launch nationwide on June 17. 'Adobo Ranch gives our guests even more ways to customize their meals and explore bold new flavor combinations with our real ingredients,' Chipotle chief marketing officer Chris Brandt told Unfortunately, what the restaurant chain hoped was a creative innovation has made several employees lose their appetites. 'Was so hype for this and it's actually dogs***,' a worker wrote on a Reddit thread, claiming that people who approved it have 'broken taste buds.' 'Tried it at a location in Ohio and it really wasn't that good,' another person wrote. Several customers also chimed in on the discussions and were just as unenthusiastic about the idea of the dip as Chipotle employees. 'YIKES! That sounds terrible,' one user wrote. 'It looks terrible. I can hear the refunds from here,' another said. But some Reddit users are excited to try what they believe will be a 'delicious dip.' A couple commenters believe if the dip has lime juice, it could have a better chance of winning over fans. 'Idk, sounds like it has potential. They probably need to add some lime,' a Reddit user wrote. 'I'm pretty sure all it needs is some lime juice. Not joking,' another person responded. Chipotle first tested the dip at select locations in California and Ohio last summer. However, the chain didn't want to expand it nationally until receiving guest and employee feedback. The initial reviews turned out positive, and TikTok food blogger said the ranch should be at 'every location' after pairing it with the Smoked Brisket, which the chain brought back after a three-year hiatus. 'Chipotle ranch! The best kind of ranch anywhere!,' an enthusiastic commenter responded to the video. Chipotle fans and employees expressed their frustration over the dip's upcoming arrival on Reddit Chipotle's comparable restaurant sales fell 0.4 percent in the first quarter of this year Besides the sauce, Chipotle drove social media crazy after releasing its limited-edition Honey Chicken. The chain also survived the effects of inflation, rising restaurant prices, and shocking bankruptcy rumors. Its long streak of rising sales ended during this year's first quarter after its comparable restaurants sales fell 0.4 percent. However, the chain earned $2.88 billion in net revenue during the quarter, a 6.4 percent increase from the same time last year. The chain is working to bounce back from the sales slump and is planning to open its first restaurant in Mexico next in 2026. The chain is scheduled to release its second quarter earnings report on July 23. Until then, fans can stop by a participating US location and participate in the 'Summer of Extras' event, which will give Rewards members the chance to score extra points and benefits now through August 31.

Orecchiette with sugarbelle tomatoes, sausage and fennel
Orecchiette with sugarbelle tomatoes, sausage and fennel

The Guardian

time30-05-2025

  • Health
  • The Guardian

Orecchiette with sugarbelle tomatoes, sausage and fennel

I make versions of this pasta on repeat. It works especially well with Tesco Finest Signature sausages, which are made with British pork and seasoned with herbs and spices to enhance their succulent flavour, and orecchiette, a small ear-shaped pasta made from durum wheat. This pasta is particularly good for catching pockets of the delicious sauce – a combination of sundried tomato pesto rosso, fennel, and Tesco Finest sugarbelle tomatoes, which are bursting with sweet flavour. These few high-quality ingredients make this pasta feel extra special. Prep 10 min Cook 45 min Serves 4 2 tbsp Tesco Finest Sicilian extra virgin olive oil, plus extra to serve4 Tesco Finest Signature pork sausages 1 fennel bulb, thinly sliced and green fronds reserved1 garlic clove, crushed 1⁄2 tbsp fennel seeds, crushed1⁄2 tsp chilli flakes 220g Tesco Finest sugarbelle tomatoes, halved350g Tesco Finest orecchiette 4 tbsp Tesco Finest sundried tomato pesto rosso Big handful fresh basil, chopped, plus extra to serveTesco Finest parmigiano reggiano, to serve Suggested wine pairing Tesco Finest primitivo Heat 1 tbsp of the olive oil in a large, non-stick frying pan or shallow casserole dish. Squeeze the sausage meat out of the skins and into the pan and break the meat into bite-size nuggets. Fry over a medium heat for 8-10 minutes or until golden brown. Once cooked, scoop out with a slotted spoon and transfer to a bowl. Using the same pan, add the remaining olive oil, sliced fennel and a pinch of salt. Fry gently over a low-medium heat for 15 minutes or until softened. Add the garlic, fennel seeds and chilli and fry for 2 minutes. Tip in the tomatoes and fry for 7-8 minutes or until popping and softened. Bring a large pan of salted water to the boil. Add the orecchiette and cook according to packet instructions. Reserve 200ml of the starchy pasta cooking water then drain away the rest. Add the pesto to the pan of fennel and tomatoes along with the cooked sausage meat, pasta and 150ml of the pasta water. Toss together until the pasta is coated in a glossy sauce. Add a splash more water if it seems a little dry. Season to taste and toss through the basil. Spoon into bowls and top with more olive oil and parmesan, if you like. Finish with extra basil and the fennel fronds. Shop the ingredients for this recipe on and discover how Tesco Finest can make your everyday taste better

Major discount chain is selling bottles of US Chick-fil-A burger sauce as shoppers go wild for it
Major discount chain is selling bottles of US Chick-fil-A burger sauce as shoppers go wild for it

The Sun

time29-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Sun

Major discount chain is selling bottles of US Chick-fil-A burger sauce as shoppers go wild for it

FANS of Chick-fil-A are in for a treat as the fast food chain's iconic sauce is now available at a popular UK store. The famous "delicious and delightful" burger sauce can now be purchased across Britain. Last year, the popular US chain announced it would be opening five locations across the UK. These restaurants are the first to be opened outside of the US, and can be found in Belfast, Liverpool, Leeds, and London. But don't worry if you don't live near one of these cities, because you can now recreate that Chick-fil-A magic at home. One eagle-eyed shopper spotted the brand's iconic sauce on the shelf of a popular retailer. "New Chick-fil-A sauce at Home Bargains," the Facebook user captioned a picture of the product. And if the Home Bargains buy isn't enough to hold you over until you can get your hands on the real thing, why not plan out your order now? The Sun's Money team previously visited Chick-fil-A headquarters in Atlanta to test out all the menu items on offer. According to them, Chick-fil-A's signature fan favourite - the Original Chicken Sandwich - "reinvents" what you may be used to when choosing a fast food main. Meanwhile, the original chicken Chick-fil-A sandwich contains a freshly breaded boneless breast of chicken, pressure cooked in 100% refined peanut oil and served on a toasted bun with dill pickle chips. In fact, all of the items cooked in the chain's fryers are done so in refined peanut oil - but don't panic if you are allergic to nuts. COMING SOON: US Fast Food Chains Invade the UK! The peanut oil is refined, bleached and deodorized, which means the proteins which can trigger a reaction, are stripped out during the processing. Reporters for the Money team described the chicken sandwich as "unparalleled if compared to similar items available at McDonald's or KFC". "What I loved about taking a bite was realising how fresh and unprocessed the chicken breast meat was," one reporter said. "Unlike chicken patties from other fast food chains, the meat at Chick-fil-A seemed to break away just like it would if you were cooking your own chicken breast at home. "Knowing it isn't ultra-processed makes the whole sandwich taste even better." When is Chick-fil-A coming to the UK? Chick-fil-A is set to open its first UK site in early 2025 and then up to five in the following two years. The move comes after Chick-fil-A opened a temporary pop-up branch in Reading in 2019. However, the town centre restaurant shut after its six-month lease expired in 2020. It came after controversy around comments by the company's then-chief executive, Dan Cathy, opposing same-sex marriage. While we don't know where Chick-fil-A plans to open its new UK restaurants just yet, the company told The Sun that they will be strategically located across the UK to give everyone access to the brand. The chain's most popular menu items, including the original Chick-fil-A chicken sandwich, nuggets, waffle fries, and spicy deluxe chicken sandwich, will all appear on UK high streets in 2025. The new Belfast branch first opened its doors on Thursday, March 27, at the Applegreen Templepatrick Services on the outskirts of the city. Meanwhile the locations in Britain have yet to announce official opening dates. Chick-fil-A did reveal plans to expand further into the European market. The company also shared its intention to open stores in Asia by 2030. 2

How Italian Home Cooks Make Their Pasta Taste So Good
How Italian Home Cooks Make Their Pasta Taste So Good

New York Times

time28-05-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

How Italian Home Cooks Make Their Pasta Taste So Good

TL;DR: It's not necessarily the pasta water. It's the marriage of starch, cheese and water, Eric Kim writes. This spoonable pasta is a dance of sorts between two pots: one with fresh green beans and orecchiette, the other with sausage ragù. David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. Published May 28, 2025 Updated May 28, 2025 When the chef Carla Lalli Music recently made pasta with sausage and broccoli rabe for dinner, it came out too salty. Her error? She used oversalted pasta water to finish her sauce. 'Sometimes it's better not to use it,' she said, claiming that a splash of 'regular old water' does the same trick. Many a recipe writer and Italian cook has espoused the virtues of saving some starchy water before draining pasta to then toss with the noodles and sauce. That starch is said to help thicken a sauce so it can better coat pasta. But does it really make that much of a difference? Even the renowned cookbook author Marcella Hazan, in 'Marcella Cucina,' writes that cooking with pasta water 'imparts the same tedious, faintly gelatinous texture to what otherwise have been fresh and lively sauces.' Use it 'occasionally,' she advises. Daniel M. Busiello, a physicist and researcher at the University of Padova, said over a teleconference call that the keys to a silky sauce are the relationships among starch, cheese and water. In April, Mr. Busiello, along with seven other Italian scientists, published the latest version of a paper on cacio e pepe, finding — after months of tests — that the concentration of starch relative to the amount of cheese and water is what directly affects the dish's creaminess. Here's why: Starch prevents what the scientists coined as the 'Mozzarella Phase,' or what happens when heat causes the proteins in cheese (casein and whey) to clump, creating a sauce that is wet and stringy like mozzarella, rather than smooth, creamy and emulsified. 'The starch screens the interaction between proteins by basically putting itself in the middle,' to prevent that sticking, he said. Stirring in plain water achieves the same saucy, glossy result as pasta water, so long as there is enough cheese and starch released from stirring the pasta. But you're boiling pasta and already have that water, so why not use it? In this recipe, pasta water is made more useful as fresh green beans boiled with the pasta season the water with their gentle vegetal umami, while the quick sausage ragù simmers in another. In a dance of sorts between the two pans, the cooked beans and pasta are drained and added to the ragù. As a final step, a spritz of lemon juice and a generous splash of that savory green bean broth are stirred vigorously into the sauced pasta, along with Parmesan, helping to draw out the pasta's starch while letting the cheese melt into the sauce without splitting. A short pasta shape, such as orecchiette, macaroni or wagon wheels, is the easiest to stir into a silky sauce here — and means that you can eat the dish with a spoon in front of the television. Just be sure not to oversalt your water — you're going to need it. Follow New York Times Cooking on Instagram , Facebook , YouTube , TikTok and Pinterest . Get regular updates from New York Times Cooking, with recipe suggestions, cooking tips and shopping advice .

Julie Lin's curry leaf chicken legs with salted egg yolk sauce recipe
Julie Lin's curry leaf chicken legs with salted egg yolk sauce recipe

BreakingNews.ie

time12-05-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • BreakingNews.ie

Julie Lin's curry leaf chicken legs with salted egg yolk sauce recipe

'I became obsessed with salted egg yolk sauce after trying it at a restaurant in Singapore. It has an incredible, full-bodied flavour, a rich and velvety texture,' says cookery writer Julie Lin. 'There's something so satisfying about salting your own egg yolks. The transformation of the yolk, as it solidifies, reminds me of an orange fruit pastille. Combined with evaporated milk – an ingredient used a lot in Malaysia due to the lack of fresh dairy farms – the richness is irresistible.' Advertisement Curry leaf chicken legs with salted egg yolk sauce Ingredients (Serves 4) 2tsp ground turmeric 1tsp chilli powder 4 chicken legs, skin on Vegetable oil, for frying Salt and freshly ground black pepper For the salted egg yolk sauce: 2tbsp butter 2 garlic cloves, peeled and minced 3–4cm piece of root ginger, peeled and minced 4 baked salted egg yolks 10 fresh curry leaves, plus extra (optional) to garnish 2 fresh red or green bird's eye chillies, chopped (optional) 3tbsp evaporated milk 1tsp white sugar ¼tsp ground white pepper (Liz Seabrook/PA) Method 1. If salting your own egg yolks: cover the base of a shallow plastic container with fine salt, 2-3cm deep. Use a spoon to make dents, then add a yolk to each. Cover them with more salt, then refrigerate for 8 hours or overnight. The yolks should now have a sticky, gummy texture, perfect for layering on rice. They keep for 3 days in an airtight container in the fridge. 2. Preheat the oven to its lowest setting (about 60°C/40°C fan), place the yolks on an oiled wire rack and bake for 3 hours until dry and hard. Store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 months. Advertisement 3. Combine the turmeric and chilli powder in a small bowl, then season with salt and black pepper. Rub this spice mixture into the chicken legs and let them marinate in the fridge for at least 30 minutes, or ideally overnight. 4. Heat a generous amount of vegetable oil in a heavy-based pan over a medium heat. Carefully lower the chicken legs into the hot oil and fry until golden and fully cooked. This should take about 10–15 minutes on each side, depending on their size. Once cooked, set the chicken aside on kitchen paper to drain any excess oil. 5. Melt the butter in a saucepan over a medium heat. Add the garlic and ginger, then fry until fragrant. Add the salted egg yolks and cook, stirring continuously, until it becomes a creamy, emulsified sauce. 6. Add the curry leaves and chillies (if using), then stir for a further minute. Pour in the evaporated milk, then mix in the sugar and white pepper. Stir until the sauce becomes thick and creamy. Advertisement 7. Once the sauce is ready, add the fried chicken and toss in the sauce until each piece is well coated. Serve hot, garnished with additional curry leaves, if desired. (Ebury/PA) Sama Sama by Julie Lin is published in hardback by Ebury Press. Photography by Liz Seabrook. Available now

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