The Dish I Bring to Every Potluck

Welcome to You’ve Got Time for This , a column where Bon Appétit’s editor in chief Dawn Davis highlights recipes from our archives that are delicious and accessible, and work every time.

The pursuit of art nearly ruined the potluck for me.

Young, curious, and crushing on New York City, I volunteered as a docent at the Museum for African Art. The museum was situated in Soho, at the time one of the coolest neighborhoods in the city, and had been designed by Maya Lin. The staff came not only from the African diaspora but also from Asia, Latin America, Europe and every pocket of America. It offered exactly what I had come to the city seeking: exposure to cultural traditions and people from around the globe.

When the museum’s founder suggested a staff potluck to which even docents were invited, I knew the food would be outstanding and varied. Filipino Adobo, Senegalese peanut stew, and manicotti bursting with the freshest ricotta were all on offer. My plate was full and I was ready to savor everything when a Nigerian staff member walked in and voiced his vehement disapproval, “If I invite you to my home for dinner, I’m not going to ask you to bring your own food,” he said, with a dismissive head shake. Because I’d lived in Africa briefly and experienced outsized hospitality at every turn, his disappointment cut right through me. He was right, I thought. Where’s the hospitality in asking someone to bring food to your dinner party? From that point on, I decided that if you were invited into my own home, I wouldn't insult you by asking you to cook your own food.

I stood my ground until nearly two decades later, when a bevy of moms convinced me to celebrate the end of the school year with a potluck family dinner at my place. Daunted by the prospect of cooking for 20 adults and 30 kids on my own, I capitulated.

One taste of Troy’s tangy homemade BBQ sauce and LuShawn’s’s super-moist chocolate cake, and I reversed my decades-long rule: You’re not insulting your guests by asking them to cook, I now understood, you’re giving them an opportunity to show off their best, most crowd-pleasing dish.

And that brings me to the subject of my second You’ve Got Time For This, the newsletter in which I scour the archives of Bon Appétit and Epicurious looking for those recipes where the payoff outpaces the effort. When looking for what to take to a small, “we’re all vaxxed” reunion, I discovered Yotam Ottolenghi’s Baked Minty Rice with Feta and Pomegranate Relish . Perfect for any kind of dinner, it’s a particularly elegant addition to a potluck for several reasons. Across cultures and age groups, most everyone loves rice. It complements meat but is vegetarian on its own, and when timed right is easy to serve piping hot instead of lukewarm, which is the fate of most dishes at a potluck. Before setting out, bake the rice for about half an hour, during which time you make the sweet, tangy, herby, and bright relish. (I highly advise getting an olive pitter .) Once at your destination, drain the feta, sprinkle it atop the rice, and broil it. Top it with the relish before serving, and watch your friends enjoy one of the most festive, colorful, and delicious rice dishes I know.

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Source : food

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