Current:Home > MarketsThe New York Times Cooking: A recipe for success -Bright Future Finance
The New York Times Cooking: A recipe for success
View
Date:2025-04-27 16:02:56
When it comes to turkey, Melissa Clark is an expert. She's an award-winning cookbook author, and a food columnist at The New York Times. Ahead of Thanksgiving, she showed Sanneh her latest recipe: "reheated" turkey.
"Every year, I get so many emails, letters: 'I have to make my turkey ahead and drive it to my daughters, my son-in-law, my cousin, my aunt,'" Clark said. "So, I brought this up in one of our meetings, and my editor said, 'Okay, go with it.'"
- Recipe: Make-Ahead Roast Turkey by Melissa Clark (at New York Times Cooking)
"That looks really juicy," said Sanneh. "I'm no expert, but if you served that to me, I would've no idea that was reheated."
As a kid, Clark grew up cooking with Julia Child cookbooks, splattered with food: "Oh my God, those cookbooks, they're like, all the pages are stuck together. You can't even open them anymore!"
Over the years, Clark has contributed more than a thousand recipes to the paper. Of course, The New York Times isn't primarily known for recipes. The paper, which has nearly ten million subscribers, launched the NYT Cooking app in 2014, and started charging extra for it three years later. It now lists more than 21,000 recipes, from a peanut butter and pickle sandwich, to venison medallions with blackberry sage sauce. Dozens of recipes are added each month.
Emily Weinstein, who oversees cooking and food coverage at the Times, believes recipes are an important part of the paper's business model. "There are a million people who just have Cooking, and there are millions more who have access to Cooking, because they are all-in on The New York Times bundle," she said.
"And at a basic price of about $5 a month, that's pretty good business," said Sanneh.
"Seems that way to me!" Weinstein laughed.
And the subscribers respond, sometimes energetically. "We have this enormous fire hose of feedback in the form of our comments section," said Weinstein. "We know right away whether or not people liked the recipe, whether they thought it worked, what changes they made to it."
Clark said, "I actually do read a lot of the notes – the bad ones, because I want to learn how to improve, how to write a recipe that's stronger and more fool-proof; and then, the good ones, because it warms my heart. It's so gratifying to read that, oh my God, this recipe that I put up there, it works and people loved it, and the meal was good!"
Each recipe the Times publishes must be cooked, and re-cooked. When "Sunday Morning" visited Clark, she was working on turkeys #9 and #10 – which might explain why she is taking this Thanksgiving off.
"This year, I'm going to someone else's house for Thanksgiving," Clark said.
"And they're making you a turkey? They must be nervous," said Sanneh.
"Not at all."
"I guarantee you that home chef right now is already stressing about this."
"Um, he has sent me a couple of texts about it, yeah!" Clark laughed.
For more info:
- New York Times Cooking
- New York Times Recipes by Melissa Clark
Story produced by Mark Hudspeth. Editor: Joseph Frandino.
"Sunday Morning" 2023 "Food Issue" recipe index
Delicious menu suggestions from top chefs, cookbook authors, food writers, restaurateurs, and the editors of Food & Wine magazine.
- In:
- The New York Times
- Recipes
veryGood! (859)
Related
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Georgia House leaders signal Medicaid expansion is off the table in 2024
- 4 candidates run in Georgia House election to replace Richard Smith, who died
- 19 Little Luxuries To Elevate Your Mood and Daily Routine- Pink Toilet Paper, Scented Trash Bags & More
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Biden provides chip maker with $1.5 billion to expand production in New York, Vermont
- Jada Pinkett Smith, the artist
- Woman arrested nearly 20 years after baby found dead at Phoenix airport
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Summer House's Carl Radke Shares Love Life Update 6 Months After Lindsay Hubbard Breakup
Ranking
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Neuschwanstein castle murder case opens with U.S. man admitting to rape, killing of fellow U.S. tourist
- American man admits to attacking 2 US tourists and killing one of them near a famous German castle
- Powerball winning numbers for Feb. 19, 2024 drawing: Jackpot rises to $348 million
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- How Ashlee Simpson Really Feels About SNL Controversy 20 Years Later
- U.S. military reports 1st Houthi unmanned underwater vessel in Red Sea
- Beatles to get a Fab Four of biopics, with a movie each for Paul, John, George and Ringo
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Shohei Ohtani hits home run in first live spring training batting practice with Dodgers
Indiana lawmakers vote to lift state ban on happy hours
What does protein do for your body? Plant vs animal sources, and other FAQs answered
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Woman arrested in 2005 death of newborn who was found in a Phoenix airport trash can
Attorneys for Georgia slave descendants urge judge not to throw out their lawsuit over island zoning
Mortician makes it to Hollywood on 'American Idol' with performance of this Tina Turner hit