Epicurious Cookware
Griddle Up Greatness
Move over, plain pancakes: we've got the recipes to kick your griddle up to the next notch.
- Claire Benoist1/6
Tomato-Prosciutto Grilled Cheese
Upgrade your grilled cheese game with some honey-vinegar tomato jam and a thin slice of prosciutto.
- 2/6
Steak-and-Mushroom Reubens
Get that classic deli taste right in your kitchen: the secret is in the sauerkraut.
- Hirsheimer & Hamilton3/6
Pea Pancakes
The only way these blini-style pancakes could be better? Served with a side of dill-sprinkled gravlax.
- 4/6
Blackberry Farm Griddle Cakes
The ultimate pancake experience: light, fluffy, with just a hint of cornmeal inside for texture.
- 5/6
Chocolate Griddle Cakes with Chocolate Sauce
Serve these rich chocolate cakes with a side of fresh citrusy fruit.
- Photo by Hirsheimer & Hamilton6/6
Pan-Seared Sausage with Lady Apples and Watercress
All you need is one griddle to bring this sweet sausage dish together.

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The possibilities seem bottomless when you're armed with a pot to match.

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It's not the size of the pot–it's what you do with it that counts. And here are fourteen great things to do.

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Whether you're simmering a sauce or frying up something tasty, looks like you've got a new right-hand pan. Unless you're a lefty.
Like hummingbird cake and a steak salad with feta dressing.
From German potato salad to the “best halibut.”
Like peach yogurt semifreddo, apple pie smoothies, golden yogurt cake, and more.
Peel-and-eat shrimp, corn on the cob with basil butter, three-ingredient peach floats, and more.
Like apricot-almond, cheesy mushroom, cannoli-inspired, and more.
We’ve got sausage with cabbage and giardiniera, tomato aguachile, and matcha-berry frozen yogurt.
These are the varieties you’re most likely to come across in American markets.
Join Epicurious for a behind-the-scenes look at a 160-year-old rice cracker factory in Japan, where one of the country’s most popular traditional snacks, senbei, is still made by hand using time-honored techniques. Senbei are sweet, crispy rice crackers often enjoyed with green tea and have been a staple of Japanese cuisine and culture for over a thousand years. Discover the process behind crafting these ancient snacks and how this historic factory has preserved its artisanal methods across generations.
We challenged chefs of three different skill levels–amateur Billy, home cook Emily, and professional chef Yuji Haraguchi–to make us their take on teriyaki. We then asked expert food scientist Rose to explain each chef's choices along the way. Which teriyaki dish do you want to tuck into first?