This Reader Has Cooked More Than 4,000 Saveur Recipes! Here Are the Six He Makes Again and Again (2024)

EDITOR’S NOTE: If you peruse the comments about our recipes, you’ll likely find the same name over and over again. Robert Nelson always posts practical and to-the-point reactions like “Good, and fun to make,” or “These were good.,” or “This was incredible.” Nelson, a bonafide food historian, has attempted upwards of 4,000 of Saveur’s recipes and become a guest at Saveur’s proverbial table. In 2012, he was invited by the magazine’s staff to come cook in our Test Kitchen, and in 2014, he reflected on our unusual relationship for Saveur’s 20th Anniversary issue. Now, with the 25th Anniversary Issue on newsstands, we decided to check back in with our number-one fan. Specifically, we had one question: Despite Nelson’s obvious preference for the new and untried, have any dishes earned repeat-performance status in his repertoire? Here’s what he had to say.

When Jim Oseland, then the editor-in-chief of Saveur, reached out in 2012 to bring me to the Saveur Test Kitchen, I’d cooked about 600 of the magazine’s recipes—as well as many from other sources—over the previous five years. After cooking in the Test Kitchen, and meeting Oseland, well, that was it for “other” recipes. By 2014, I’d cooked over a thousand Saveur recipes. They’re so well-tested that they come out beautifully almost every time—why go elsewhere? Coupled with that is the fact that I’ve since become a “food historian” (I’m now an associate professor in the history department at the University of Windsor, Canada), and my curiosity for dishes from around the world is limitless. I honestly try at least one new recipe (or more) nearly every night (an academic’s schedule allows for this…). Thus, over the last five years, I have cooked an insane amount of Saveur recipes. My Excel spreadsheet indicates that as of today, I have cooked 4,010 recipes (made this Indian-style lamb pot roast for dinner last night; it was delicious). That’s right, 4,010. Saveur.com lists about 8,500 recipes, and I know of a couple hundred from early issues that have yet to be published online, so by my math, I’ve cooked just short of half of every Saveur recipe from the last 25 years.

Now, of those more than 4,000 recipes cooked, there are very, very few I ever repeat, so the ones that do get made multiple times are absolute winners and are loved by my family of five (including young children and adults). Here are my repeats, and why they’ve earned a spot on this very selective list:

All-time Favorite: Kung Pao Chicken

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The whole meal is done within an hour, and can be doubled or even tripled. A reasonably stocked Asian pantry provides all you need. I take out the whole arbol chilis right before serving to avoid any accidental bites. Rice cooker provides the starch. Never anything left.

Get the recipe for Kung Pao Chicken »

When guests taste it, they want to know the secret. It’s not only the curry, but the volume of curry and chili powder. Delicious.

Get the recipe for Kill City Chili, tripled »

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Veggie Winner: Bibimbap

A bit more work, but it stretches over two days for a family—just make more rice and fried eggs the next day. Easy way to get veggies into the kids as well. The chili paste is killer good, and yes, I use Sprite.

Get the recipe for Bibimbap »

Best Burger: Sid’s Onion Burger

Sooooooo simple, yet soooo good. I have a Wolf with a griddle, so making these burgers with all the onions is a lot of fun, feels like being a short order cook. I serve them with Roasted Potatoes , mixing ketchup and mayo together for the potatoes.

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Get the recipe for Sid’s Onion Burger »

Favorite Meal To Make When Overseas: Currywurst Sauce with Butter Braised Kohlrabi

We spend a lot of time in Berlin, and whenever we’re there, my repeat, go-to meal is Currywurst sauce over bratwurst with Butter braised kohlrabi (2010). Easy, so tasty, and again some good vegetables!

Get the recipe for Currywurst Sauce with Butter Braised Kohlrabi »

Top Dessert: Lemon Drizzle Cake

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Finally, this cake is our family’s idea of the perfect sweet-and-sour balance. It’s the only dessert I ever repeat.

Get the recipe for Lemon Drizzle Cake »

Nelson has recently started an Instagram account to document his cooking journey. You can follow him at @chef_robnelson.

Get seasonal recipes, methods and techniques sent right to your inbox—sign up here to receive Saveur newsletters. And don’t forget to follow us on Instagram at @SaveurMag.

This Reader Has Cooked More Than 4,000 Saveur Recipes! Here Are the Six He Makes Again and Again (2024)

FAQs

Is saveur still in print? ›

Saveur magazine is back—in print. It will appear again in March 2024, and pre-orders are being taken right now, writes Kat Craddock, editor and CEO of Saveur. There will be two issues per year to start. The title's previous owners stopped publishing print issues during the pandemic.

What type of writing is a recipe? ›

Narrative format

Here, you get paragraph-style lists of ingredients, instructions, and improvement tips.

Are print magazines dead? ›

While the circulation and influence of print magazines may have reduced, they are not necessarily dead or even dying. They can be seen as moving into a smaller, but sustainable, place in the media landscape.

Do print magazines still sell? ›

But with a projected $26.55 billion revenue for the Print Newspapers and Magazines market in 2023, there's certainly still money to be made through print magazines.

What is a book with recipes called? ›

A cookbook or cookery book is a kitchen reference containing recipes.

Is food writing a genre? ›

Food writing is a genre of writing that focuses on food and includes works by food critics, food journalists, chefs and food historians.

Why is it called a recipe? ›

Recipes are basically instructions; receipts are a record of what has been received as part of a transaction. Both recipe and receipt derive from recipere, the Latin verb meaning "to receive or take," with receipt adding a detour through Old North French and Middle English.

Is Delish a reliable website? ›

Why You Should Trust Us. We hand-pick every product that appears on Delish with you in mind—and they're all tested, researched, or editor-approved.

Is there an app that stores recipes? ›

Recipe Keeper is the easy to use, all-in-one recipe organizer, shopping list and meal planner available across all of your devices. Enter your recipes with as much or as little information as you like.

When was the first recipe written? ›

The earliest known written recipes date to 1730 BC and were recorded on cuneiform tablets found in Mesopotamia. Other early written recipes date from approximately 1600 BC and come from an Akkadian tablet from southern Babylonia. There are also works in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs depicting the preparation of food.

Can I write a cook book? ›

Whether you want to turn your own recipes into a cookbook as a family keepsake, or work with a publisher to get the most viral recipes from your blog onto paper and into bookstores, making a cookbook is often a fun but work-intensive process.

What magazines are no longer in print? ›

There are many magazines we loved that are no more. Remember Sesame Street's 3-2-1 Contact (1979-2001)? Disney Magazine (1965-2005), Atari Connection (1981-1984), Autoweek (1958-2019), Barney Magazine, (1994-2003), CD-ROM Today (1993-1996), Children's Digest (1950-2009), Cosmogirl (1999-2009), Cracked (1958-2007).

What is the oldest magazine still in print? ›

Scientific American (founded 1845)

As the oldest continuously published magazine in the country, Scientific American's content database has original reporting on inventions like Alexander Graham Bell's telephone and Thomas Edison's lightbulb.

What is the oldest cookbook still in print? ›

The first recorded cookbook that is still in print today is Of Culinary Matters (originally, De Re Coquinaria), written by Apicius, in fourth century AD Rome. It contains more than 500 recipes, including many with Indian spices.

Is More magazine still in print? ›

In February 2010, More was updated with a new logo and tagline: "For Women of Style and Substance". In February 2016, the Meredith Corporation announced that More would cease publication with the April 2016 issue.

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