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Coconut & Lime Muffins (Jumbo Sized)

for the batter:

  • zest of three limes
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 1/4 cups flour
  • 3 teaspoons baking powder
  • Pinch salt
  • 1/2 cup canola oil
  • 1/4 cup lime juice
  • 2 eggs
  • 2/3 cup buttermilk
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • drop lime extract
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened shredded coconut

glaze:

  • 1 cup powdered sugar
  • 2-3 tablespoons lime juice
  • Zest
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened shredded coconut toasted in a skillet

or sugar:

  • 1/4 cup coarse sugar I used demerara sugar
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened shredded coconut toasted in a skillet
  1. Preheat oven to 425. Line 6 wells in a jumbo muffin tin. Set aside.

  2. In a large bowl or bowl of a stand mixer and mix together the zest and sugar until well mixed and fragrant.

  3. In a second bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients. Add them to the sugar mixture in a steam as the mixer runs. A clumpy dough will form.

  4. Add the oil, juice, eggs, buttermilk and extracts. Mix until a fairly smooth batter forms. Fold in coconut.

  5. Fill each well about 3/4 of the way. Sprinkle with coarse sugar and coconut if using.

  6. Bake for 5 minutes then reduce heat to 375 and bake an additional 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center of a muffin comes out clean or with one or two coarse crumbs.

  7. Meanwhile, whisk together glaze ingredients, if using.

  8. Remove to wire rack and drizzle with glaze if using about 3 minutes after you remove them from the oven. Or leave the muffins unadorned all together!

  9. Cool on wire rack.

  • If I am not serving these muffins right away, I chose the sugar option instead of the glaze. The glaze is really best the first day. Alternatively, make the glaze fresh when you want to serve the muffins.
  • I order this coconut in bulk
  • Lime extract can be oddly tricky to find but grocery store stalwart McCormick does make it.

May is the 20th anniversary of this blog if you can believe that! It is getting harder to find new things to make and post but I knew I had to make some coconut and lime food to celebrate!

I started this blog back in May 2004 when I was a teacher in grad school to share what I was cooking. I had picked the name pretty much randomly (two things that taste good together!) not thinking I’d have it still in 2024. Back then I’d have to explain what a blog was every time I mentioned it. I’ve been featured in many magazines, websites, radio and tv since then. I’ve written several cookbooks! Blogs rose to prominence and then fell but here I still am.

These muffins are super moist and delicious. I bought this jumbo muffin pan last year and it turns out jumbo muffins are so much more fun to make and eat! You get proportionally more of the soft center and less of what I like the least, the side crust. I think you can taste the flavors of the muffins more than you can smaller ones. Maybe that’s all in my head but it feels true.

The trick is to really beat the lime zest into the sugar so those oils really distribute and to use a tiny drop of lime extract. This is especially important when you are making these muffins outside of citrus season–the limes need a little boost!

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Food

Berries and Cream Mille-Feuille

Berries and Cream Mille-Feuille

Step 1

Step 2

Meanwhile, beat 8 oz. cream cheese, room temperature, 1 Tbsp. vanilla extract, 1 tsp. Diamond Crystal or ½ tsp. Morton kosher salt, and 1½ cups (165 g) powdered sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment on medium speed until light, fluffy, and smooth, about 2 minutes. Scre down sides of bowl, reduce speed to low, and with motor running, slowly stream in 3 cups heavy cream. Beat, gradually increasing speed to medium-high, until medium-stiff peaks form and mixture is light and fluffy, about 2 minutes. Transfer cream mixture to a piping bag fitted with a large straight tip (or use a large resealable plastic bag with a corner cut off).

Step 3

Stir together zest and juice of 1 lemon and 1 cup strawberry jam in a small bowl.

Step 4

Place 1 sheet of pastry on a platter or clean baking sheet. Pipe a border of cream mixture around edges of pastry as desired. Spoon dollops of about half of jam mixture around, staying within border, and spread a little with an offset spatula (you won’t have enough jam to cover completely in an even layer, so no need to be that precise). Pipe a few dollops of cream mixture over jam and spread into an even layer (aim to have about half of cream mixture left). Scatter 1¼ lb. mixed fresh berries (such as strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, and/or blackberries) evenly over cream mixture. Spoon dollops of remaining jam mixture all over and gently spread as you can to create an even layer, then place second pastry sheet on top. Pipe a border of cream mixture around edges of pastry, then fill center with remaining cream mixture and spread into an even layer. Scatter remaining 1¼ lb. mixed fresh berries evenly over. Lightly dust berries with powdered sugar if desired.

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Food

25 Easy Weeknight Dinners for June

25 Easy Weeknight Dinners for June

June is when weeknight cooking starts to feel a little easier. The farmers market is overflowing, the grill is back in rotation, and dinner can often come together with little more than a pile of peak-season produce and a quick-cooking protein. Whether you’re looking for easy weeknight dinners to get through a busy workweek or simple summer meals to enjoy outside on a warm evening, these recipes have you covered.

This month’s collection leans into the flavors that define early summer. We added recipes built around corn, squash, tomatoes, fresh herbs, and seafood, while retiring some of the colder-weather dishes that made more sense earlier in the spring. You’ll find quick fish tacos, weeknight-friendly salmon recipes, hearty dinner salads, cold noodles for hot nights, and pasta dishes packed with seasonal produce. There are one-pot dinners, make-ahead favorites, and plenty of recipes that come together in 30 minutes or less. From grilled steak and smash burgers to chickpea melts and vegetable-packed pasta, these June weeknight dinner ideas make the most of the season without demanding too much of your time.

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Food

Heres How to Submit to BAs Pantry Awards for 2026

Heres How to Submit to BAs Pantry Awards for 2026

Thank you for your interest in the 2026 Pantry Awards. The submission window is now closed.

We will reach out via email if we have decided to move forward with sample requests.


We spend all year eating our way through the newest snacks, beverages, and pantry stles. We taste, test, and debate until we find the products we deem worth making room for in your fridge and pantry. This year, for the first time, we’re making it official: In summer 2026, we’re launching Bon pétit’s first-ever Pantry Awards.

Our editors are always on the hunt for the most delicious, most innovative new products hitting shelves. But to make sure we don’t miss anything worth tasting, we’re asking brands to submit products for consideration. How has your brand boosted pasta with nutrients? What’s the new functional ingredient you’re putting in a protein bar? We want to know. Scroll down to see which items are eligible and how to nominate them.

How to submit your product to Bon pétit’s Pantry Awards

Eligibility:

Products must have launched between January 1, 2025, and May 31, 2026. They should be available for purchase in the United States upon submission.

Process and timeline:

Submissions are due by May 31, 2026. Multiple flavors of single product lines should be submitted in one form.

Samples should be available for editors to test by June 1, 2026. We will contact you directly if we’d like to test your product. We ask that brands not send unsolicited products ahead of our outreach; samples sent without request may not be reviewed.

Pantry Awards will launch in summer 2026.

Categories for consideration:

  • Snacks (e.g. chips, crackers, popcorn, pretzels)
  • Condiments and sauces (e.g. hot sauce, pasta sauce, spreads, dressings)
  • Pantry stles (e.g. oils, pasta, grains, canned goods, spices)
  • Sweets (e.g. chocolate, candy, baked goods)
  • Drinks (nonalcoholic only)

Editor’s note: If your product does not fit exactly into one of these categories, please feel free to submit anyway, and we will determine whether it qualifies for consideration after reviewing your submission. We are accepting perishable and frozen products.

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Food

Mai Tai

Mai Tai

Among the most iconic tiki cocktails, the classic mai tai is widely credited to Victor Bergeron of Trader Vic’s, though some cocktail historians trace its roots to the tropical rum drinks pioneered by Donn Beach (a.k.a. Don the Beachcomber) a decade earlier. Whatever its origin, the drink has earned its place in the cocktail canon.

Despite its reputation as a sugary beach-bar drink, a proper mai tai is crisp, citrusy, and unologetically rum-forward—not neon-colored or overloaded with sweetened fruit juice. Fresh lime juice, orange curaçao, and nutty orgeat bring balance and complexity, while a blend of white and aged rum delivers layered tropical-fruit, vanilla, and caramel notes that define the drink.

This classic mai tai recipe keeps the focus where it belongs: on great rum. Ready in just five minutes, it’s equally suited to a solo hpy hour or a backyard gathering.

Tips for making the best mai tai

What rum is best for a mai tai?

A combination of white rum and aged dark rum creates the best balance. White rum is lighter-bodied and fruity, while aged rum brings notes of banana, vanilla, and burnt sugar, along with a richer mouthfeel.

Seek out producers who are transparent about sourcing and production methods, then choose bottles with enough character to stand up to the lime and orgeat. We like Denizen Merchant’s Reserve for the dark rum and Planteray 3-Year for the white. Merchant’s Reserve was developed specifically to cture the flavor profile of a classic mai tai, while Planteray is affordable, easy to find, and packed with tropical fruit flavor.

Orgeat is a sweet almond syrup flavored with orange flower water that gives a classic mai tai (among other tropical drinks) its signature nutty flavor and silky texture.

We like Small Hand Foods for its rich flavor and floral complexity, but L’Orgeat and Liber & Co. are also excellent options. For a sweeter, more traditional tiki-bar profile, BG Reynolds is another favorite. You can also make your own orgeat. Read more →

Can I use Cointreau instead of curaçao?

You can, but orange curaçao (not the blue stuff) delivers a fuller citrus flavor that complements the rum better. Pierre Ferrand Dry Curaçao is exceptional and makes for a balanced, classic mai tai profile. Cointreau will lend brighter citrus flavors, but overall, make the drink taste less complex.

You can also use Grand Marnier, which tends to be sweeter than most curaçaos and brings warm, jammy flavors reminiscent of orange marmalade.

Can I use bottled lime juice?

We don’t recommend it. Lime juice provides bright acidity that balances the sweetness of the rum, orange liqueur, and orgeat. Bottled juice won’t deliver the same vibrant, fresh citrus flavor.

Can I make a big batch of mai tais for a crowd?

To make about 8 servings, sw the recipe’s ounces for cups and stir everything together in a large pitcher. The cocktail will keep well for about 8 hours (keep refrigerated).

Combine 8 spent lime halves, 1 cup fresh lime juice, 1 cup aged rum, 1 cup white rum, ½ cup curaçao or Grand Marnier, ¼ cup orgeat, and ¼ cup simple syrup in a large pitcher without ice. Add 3 Tbsp. water and stir well to combine. Chill until very cold, at least 1 hour.

Divide cold mixture between 8 rocks glasses filled to the brim with crushed ice. Garnish each with a lime wedge and a mint sprig.

Preparation

Head this way for more of our favorite classic cocktail recipes →

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Food

RIP to Michelins Green Stars

RIP to Michelins Green Stars

Welcome to Open Tab, a weekly roundup of news, gossip, and stories that have stayed open in my tabs all week. Last week we covered the World Cups’s tourism bubble

The weather is warm in New York, and I had my first oysters of the season last night at Bar Susanne, the new spot from Jackie Carnesi, who also runs the historic Kellogg’s Diner. The oysters were perfect—briny and sweet—but the real coup was the giant, fish-shed strawberry tart for dessert. This is all to say: Summer is here, folks! Get thee to a raw bar!

Now for the news. (Well, news.) One small item that tickled me this week: Los Angeles mayoral candidate, former reality TV star, and famously bad budgeter Spencer Pratt—you may remember him from The Hills?—has not one but two dishes named after him at Don Antonio’s, a restaurant on the west side of LA. It’s where a few important moments from the show took place, and according to this excellent piece in Vanity Fair, Pratt is still a regular all these years later.

In other Los Angeles news: If you spend $15,000 a year at Erewhon, you can get your smoothie made before anyone else’s, Eater reported. That is just one of the perks of the reserve tier of the chain’s membership program. That’s, what, a single strawberry a month?

Also this week: There’s PFAS drama brewing in the pots and pan-iverse, AI is failing home cooks (and many others), we remember Slow Food pioneer Carlo Petrini, and Michelin quietly institutes some changes to their stars.

In 2020, the Michelin Guide introduced Green Stars as a way to honor chefs’ sustainability efforts. Previous winners include The Inn at Little Washington, Kaya in Orlando, and Dan Barbour’s Blue Hill at Stone Barns. But just six years later, the guide is retiring this designation—you won’t see a green star on any of those restaurant’s listings on the Michelin website. Sustainable chefs the world over are pretty pissed off, but as I reported a couple years ago, Michelin’s main priority these days seems to be expanding into new territories. Instead of a Green Star, Michelin will be introducing Mindful Voices, an editorial platform to share the stories and pioneering practices of chefs, hoteliers and wine producers.

One interesting tidbit: eliminating the Green Star must have been a very recent decision. I received an email from a PR person as recently as ril announcing the awards in one US state which specifically mentions Green Stars. Much to ponder!

Big Pan strikes again. Caraway, a cookware brand, is being sued by two other cookware companies—Groupe SEB USA and Meyer—because it advertises its pans as free from toxic chemicals (PFAS), as Wired reported. PFAS, colloquially known as forever chemicals, break down very slowly and are linked to health issues. The gist of the suit is that if Caraway calls its pans free of toxic chemicals, it’s implying that the chemicals other companies use are toxic—which isn’t strictly proven. Between us girls, I’d skip Caraway and go with GreenPan anyway.

It’s been a banner week for AI haters i.e yours truly. Starbucks has retired its AI inventory system after it screwed up inventory, and Uber burned through its yearly AI budget in a few months—the company is saying AI spending is harder to justify.

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