
From Kill to Grill, Prepare Pheasant Like a Michelin-Star Chef
Prepping a freshly killed pheasant is significantly more complicated than pointing and shooting.

Prepping a freshly killed pheasant is significantly more complicated than pointing and shooting.
By Nick Milanes

We conducted a blind tasting of 16 of the best available boxed wine (8 white, 8 red). A few tasted like our worst box wine memories of yore: fermented juice boxes gone bad.

GP and Caskers.com taste whisky from the five best independent distilleries in Scotland.

You can have your camembert, langres and morbier, friend.

Foraging, butchering, and cooking a meal with chef Tom Lewis of Monachyle Mhor in the Scottish Highlands.

At one of Lexington’s best bourbon bars, we laid eyes on some of the absolute rarest bottles in the world.
By Ben Bowers

From The Horn of Plenty to the myriad mouths to feed, Thanksgiving is all about abundance. Your bird should reflect that.
By Gear Patrol

How to make the poor man’s fondue.
By Jack Seemer

Easy-to-make meals have been associated with artificial preservatives and gluttonous additives for far too long.
By Tucker Bowe

Mike McParland, now 67, has been working at Webers Burgers since he was 16.

This year, like last year, we did our fair share of dining. We hunted for barbecue in Texas, ate all the burgers in L.A.

Zoe Nathan , alongside her husband and business partner Josh Loeb, owns the Rustic Canyon and Huckleberry Café & Bakery.
By Guest Writer

We bartered, we bought, and we took the bounty of the greatest agricultural state in the country back to the kitchen.

San Francisco chef Timmy Malloy takes the catch of the day and prepares it with fresh, local, seasonal produce.

The New York Pizza Project is the combined effort of five locals investigating the dwindling subculture of pizza parlors in the city.
By Guest Writer

One Wednesday afternoon, a couple of us decided to trek over to one of New York City’s favorite eateries across the river in Midwood, Brooklyn: Di Fara Pizza.
By Jack Seemer

Back in 2011 The Atlantic reported on “The Divisive Pumpkin Ale”, alleging that the style had become synonymous with increasingly stale and overdone flavors. This is still the (very subjective) argument for people who loathe the stuff.
By Chris Wright

Some chili peppers are more sweet than spicy, better suited to date night than a chest-beating contest with the boys. To learn more about the tamer varieties, we took a walk to the Chelsea Fruit Market.
By Kenny Gould

The stateside culture of craft hot sauce has had a slow-burn response to veteran heavyweights like Tabasco and Texas Pete, which sacrifice flavor for heat. Enthusiasts today are gazing toward the Pacific Northwest, where artisans are using the quality and abundance of fresh, local ingredients to produce wildly diverse newcomers to our country’s cabinet of hot sauces.
By Jack Seemer

When it comes to aging meat, you need to talk to the beef cognoscenti, and Pat LaFrieda is a card-carrying member: butchery goes back more than 100 years in his family.
By Guest Writer