Beverages
Piña Colada
With its winning combination of coconut, pineapple, and rum, this piña colada recipe is creamy, just sweet enough, and utterly refreshing.
By Kim Haasarud
Extra-Juicy Mai Tai
This mai tai stars two types of rum, with orange juice, lime juice, orgeat, and Cointreau for a fruity but balanced take on the original.
By Amy Mastrangelo
Tamer Hindi (Tamarind Drink)
Tamer Hindi is a refreshing sweet and sour beverage—made with tamarind, water, and sugar—that’s popular during the month of Ramadan.
By Marlene Matar
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41 Spring Cocktails: Easy Drinks for Right Now
Celebrate the warmer weather with these refreshing spring drinks.
By Maggie Hoffman and The Editors of Epicurious
Trident
The Trident cocktail is a riff on a negroni that uses Spain’s sherry, Italy’s Cynar, and Scandinavia’s aquavit.
By Kara Newman
Americano
The Americano cocktail is a classic Italian drink that dates back to Milan’s Caffè Camparino in the 1860s, where it was known as the Milano-Torino.
By Kara Newman
For a Perfect Citrus Twist, Use a Cheese Slicer
It’s safer than your Y-peeler and it makes a better twist.
By Emily Farris
Don’t Overlook the Other Ingredient in Your Coffee
Coffee lovers think a lot about freshly roasted beans. But your coffee-brewing water matters, too.
By Ever Meister
Manhattan
The Manhattan is a classic cocktail made with whiskey and sweet vermouth.
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Queens Park Swizzle
If you like mojitos, you’ll like this minty swizzle from the Queen’s Park Hotel in Trinidad. The swizzle is a category of cocktails named for the special bar tool used to mix all crushed-ice cocktails in the days before blenders. A swizzle stick is a long stick made with three to five forked branches originally made from the allspice bush. If you don’t have one, though, you can use a bar spoon to churn the drink with a similar motion, rotating the stick by rubbing your hands back and forth again …
By Adrienne Stillman
Old Cuban
Audrey Saunders created this sparkly hybrid of a French 75 and a mojito at her bar, New York’s Pegu Club.
By Adrienne Stillman
Japanese Cocktail
One of the oldest and most perfect of three-ingredient cocktails, the Japanese Cocktail first saw print in 1862 but remains stubbornly unknown and underappreciated.
By Robert Simonson
Red Hook
The Manhattan/Brooklyn cocktail riff that birthed a dozen others, Vincenzo Errico’s Red Hook was first served at the original Milk & Honey, the influential bar in New York.
By Robert Simonson
The Best Hot Cocoa Is Chartreuse Hot Cocoa
How an herbal liqueur from the Alps transformed my hot chocolate routine.
By Maggie Hoffman
Double Chocolate Layer Cake
This old-fashioned chocolate cake made our staff swoon! Chef Ed Kasky uses Callebaut semisweet chocolate for the cake and Guittard French-vanilla chocolate for the frosting, but any fine-quality semisweet chocolate will produce a wonderful result.
By Ed Kasky
Bourbon Chicken Liver Pâté
Though this pâté can be eaten the day it's made, we find it even more flavorful when made one or two days ahead. If you use several small ramekins instead of a pâté crock or terrine, you may need more clarified butter to seal the tops.
By Shelley Wiseman
Orange Chicken
Starring crispy fried thigh meat dressed in a savory, citrus glaze, orange chicken is a Chinese American take-out staple well worth making at home.
By Genevieve Ko
Marjolaine
Made with nutty meringue, rich chocolate ganache, and vanilla and hazelnut buttercreams, the marjolaine is the perfect cake for special occasions.
By Fredéric Morin , David McMillan, and Meredith Erickson
Why Three Cup Chicken Is One of Taiwan's Greatest Hits
San bei ji—literally “three cup chicken,” for the plentiful sesame oil, soy sauce and rice wine it contains—is one of Taiwan's most beloved dishes for a good reason.
By Cathy Erway