Regina Leader-Post

This dish will please a crowd

- JULIAN ARMSTRONG

Gather for a group meal and you’ll likely gain as much from the shared experience as you will from the food, if not more.

That’s the belief of New York Times editor and food writer Sam Sifton, who has authored an engaging cookbook endorsing regular dinners for family and friends, called See You on Sunday (Penguin Random House, $47).

Sifton’s 200 recipes are well written and beautifull­y illustrate­d, and include informativ­e introducti­ons.

Comfort dishes range from a big pot of chili to mushroom lasagna, and from eggplant Parmesan to clam chowder (using lobster stock). Offbeat recipes include steak and kidney pie made topless and with Guinness, pizza with clams or shrimp, and meat loaf of ground turkey and pork sausage.

He includes essays on necessary kitchen equipment and the well-stocked pantry, and recommends serving the essential garlic bread, big bowl of mashed potatoes, and coleslaw made with a reliable commercial mayonnaise (never Miracle Whip).

Montreal’s Joe Beef restaurant gets credit for lobster butter. “Make a great deal of this stuff if you can and freeze it,” writes Sifton.

Have a group dinner any night of the week (with safety measures in place, of course), but regularly, he says, and accept contributi­ons — maybe wine, or a cake or some flowers.

The newly fashionabl­e roasted cauliflowe­r merits two recipes — one for the whole cauli, another for florets with garlic and Parmesan. Sifton also likes to roast brussels sprouts, carrots, sweet potatoes, and this mixture of potatoes and onions.

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