SPECIAL REPORT: When the Snow Hits, Hit the Kitchen


Hi Reader,

Every time there’s a real winter storm—the kind with names, warnings, and that creeping sense of we might be here a while—The One makes the same thing. Blizzard Beef. No debate. No browsing. He reaches for a chuck roast like it’s a life preserver.

It started years ago during a blizzard that shut everything down so thoroughly even the cats looked scared. He seasoned that roast aggressively, seared it hard, slid it into a pot with water, a reckless amount of Worcestershire sauce. I, however, prefer it zhuzhed up with a bunch of sautéed root vegetables. We’ve agreed to disagree, which is how you survive both storms and relationships.

Here’s what I know: When the snow piles up and the temperature plummet to numbers that feel inhumane, cooking becomes more than dinner. It’s structure. It’s heat. It’s something to do with your hands so you don’t bite the heads off the people you love because they’re breathing too loudly.

Big pots simmering all day change the mood of a house. They slow down everyone. They give you leftovers, which means security. And they make you feel—if only for a few days—that you knew this storm was coming and you were ready.

So, please be careful. Stock up on water, food, flashlights, batteries, and medications. Charge all your devices, check your furnace, and make sure you have blankets and warm clothes. Stay off roads, prepare for potential power outages, and check on neighbors and loved ones.

Then... cook. And if things get tense being stuck in the house with everyone while the all hell let's loose outside? Stir something. It helps, honest.

The Blizzard Rules (Learned the Hard Way)

  • Cook big, not clever. This is not the moment for delicate or fussy. Choose dishes that improve after a day or two and forgive you if you wander off mid-simmer.
  • Braises are emotional support. Chuck, brisket, short ribs—they’re patient, resilient, and deeply comforting. Be like them.
  • One pot = household harmony. Fewer dishes. Less bickering. More time hovering near the stove for warmth.
  • Bread is not optional. It turns soup into a meal and leftovers into something you’ll actually look forward to.
  • Always plan one sweet. Morale matters. When the plows finally come through, you’ll want something with chocolate or spice and zero judgment.

Easy Pot Roast, Potatoes, and Vegetables

This easy pot roast with potatoes and vegetables is quick to assemble and then made in the slow cooker or crock pot or simply slid into the oven. A simple classic with beef, carrots, potatoes, and red wine. Perhaps our best—and most comforting—Sunday supper.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Maple Bourbon Braised Short Ribs

The title of these maple bourbon braised short ribs says it all. Meaty short ribs are braised in a brew of bourbon, maple syrup, beef broth, tomato paste, and herbs until amazingly tender.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Braised Brisket with Red Wine and Honey

This braised brisket with red wine and honey is sweet and tangy and fall-apart tender and so perfect it makes us go weak in the knees. And it's a hunk of beef large enough to feed a crowd so it has that going for it, too.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Marcella Hazan’s Bolognese Sauce

Imagine a sauce so deeply flavorful and luxuriously rich it zooms you straight to Bologna. This is Marcella Hazan’s iconic Bolognese—a cornerstone of Italian cooking from the woman who brought authentic regional Italian cuisine into American kitchens. With patience and simple ingredients, she created a sauce that’s nothing short of extraordinary.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Meatball Lasagna

This meatball lasagna is a playful riff from Alex Guarnaschelli on the Italian classic where tender mini beef and veal meatballs stand in for traditional meat sauce.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Three-Cheese Vegetarian Lasagna

Three-cheese vegetarian lasagna is easy and exceptional and even sorta elegant anytime of year BUT we especially welcome it at the Thanksgiving table when we need something vegetarian and lovely. Here's exactly how to make it plus what kind of cheeses work best.
☞ ​Try this recipe

White Bean and Chicken Chili

This white bean and chicken chili, a Mexican-inspired meal that's made with smoky bacon, onions, carrots, celery, peppers, and spices, is hearty, healthy, and completely doable on a weeknight.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Portuguese Bean Soup

Portuguese bean soup takes an "everything but the kitchen sink" approach by filling a brothy base with nearly everything you can imagine--including beans, sausage, ham, tomatoes, potatoes, and cabbage. Serve with a sweet, warm roll. Perfection.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Cuban Black Bean Soup

This Cuban black bean soup is made from scratch from dried black beans, peppers, onion, garlic, cumin, and vinegar. lt's cheap, simple, and vegetarian.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Slow Cooker Split Pea Soup

Slow cooker split pea soup with ham is traditional winter comfort food made easy. Just toss everything in a Crockpot and walk away. It also freezes wonderfully. You're welcome.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Authentic Vietnamese Pho

Vietnamese pho is a soup made with a beef broth rich with ginger, onions, star anise, fish sauce, and onions. Into that go rice noodles, beef, scallions, bean sprouts, and fresh herbs.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Roasted Vegetable Stock

This roasted vegetable stock from Nigel Slater simmers miso-roasted vegetables with dried mushrooms and herbs to create the most flavorful vegetable broth we've ever experienced.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Jim Lahey’s No-Knead Bread

I’ve known Jim Lahey for years, and when he first shared this no-knead bread recipe, he upended the world of home bread baking. I was skeptical—an artisan loaf with a crackling crust from a dough you barely touch? Impossible! Yet, this ridiculously easy bread recipe is the real deal. Made with just four pantry staples, it produces the most magnificent crusty bread you'll ever pull from your oven.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Pretzel Rolls

These pretzel rolls taste just like the real German pretzel deal—shiny, salty, perfectly burnished, and densely bread-y. They're reminiscent of a soft pretzel but in a more versatile shape so you can smother with butter, stuff with your favorite sandwich fixings, or inhale straight off the baking sheet.
☞ ​Try this recipe

No-Knead Cheddar Chiles Bread

This no-knead Cheddar chiles bread is dense, marvelously savory, and shot through with Cheddar cheese and plenty of green chiles for an inspired loaf of amazingness, New Mexico style.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Big Chewy Brownie Cookies

These big chewy brownie cookies are rich, buttery, and oh-so-chocolatey. Sandwich peanut butter filling between them for an extra special treat.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Make-Ahead Cinnamon Coffee Cake

This make-ahead cinnamon coffee cake is perfect for the mornings that you want to have something sweet, nutty, and freshly baked without the fuss of getting up early. It also makes a lovely afternoon snack or dessert.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Pumpkin Pie Babka

Pumpkin pie babka combines two traditional baked goods—babka and pumpkin pie—and makes them into one phenomenal dessert. Soft, fluffy bread is layered and twisted with pumpkin pie filling, then topped with a crisp streusel.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Congo Bars

These congo bars are sort of like a mashup between seven layer bars and blondies and are made with a graham cracker crust topped with condensed milk, shredded coconut, chocolate chips, and pecans. Bet you can't stop at just one.
☞ ​Try this recipe

Leite's Culinaria

Why, hello! Leite's Culinaria is the James Beard Award-winning site that helps home cooks and bakers put dinner on the table and laughs in the kitchen. Hungry for more? Join more than 30,000 food lovers and subscribe.

Read more from Leite's Culinaria

Hi Reader, There are few things in life as reliable as pasta—and believe me, I’ve tested the theory.When I was younger (and delusional), I thought “weeknight dinner” meant something quick and light, like a salad or a responsible grain bowl. Then I met Wednesday. You know her—tired, cranky, wearing yesterday’s socks and whispering, “Feed me carbs or I’ll end you.”Back in the day, my mother could turn a pound of pasta and a can of tomatoes into an act of grace. The whole apartment would fill...

Hi Reader, Whenever the calendar flips to mid-January, my body stages a quiet protest. Too much cream. Too much butter. Too much “just one more slice.” I can practically hear my arteries sighing.That’s when I go coastal.Growing up, the ocean wasn’t just a backdrop—it was therapy. My family’s version of a cleanse didn’t involve green juice or kale; it was grilled sardines, lemony cod, or a bowl of seafood rice that smelled like sunlight on saltwater. Simple food that didn’t weigh you down or...

Hi Reader, I’ve never met a bad day that couldn’t be partially fixed with cheese. Flat tire? Cheese. Missed deadline? Cheese. Existential dread because it’s January and you've already broken your New Year's resolution to get in shape? Double cheese.The One likes to remind me that cheese “isn’t a food group.” Which is adorable. Because in this house, it totally is. There’s a reason refrigerators have an entire drawer dedicated to it, people! I call it the Cheese Annex. Manchego, mozzarella,...