So Hot Right Now

Our Most Crazy-Good (or Just Crazy?) Recipes

November 12, 2015

Sometimes I like to make simple food, and sometimes I make recipes that leave my peers questioning my sanity (and social life).

Hey, skillet cookie, lookin' good. Photo by James Ransom

When I tell text them I’m making such-and-such recipe—last week, squashducken; week before that, 8-page-recipe meatloaf—responses generally contain one or more of the following:

-omg -omfg -wtf -whatttt -whoaaah -!!!! -?! -?!!!! -. . . ? -amazing -ahhmazing -[bug eye emoji] -holy [expletive]

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The recipes range from “why haven’t I done this forever?” ridiculous-good to “who would do this to themselves?”—and yet still ridiculous-good.

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Top Comment:
“Lots of kale, squash and sugar...but just a token chicken pot pie. Nothing wonderfully fishy or meaty...”
— Judith R.
Comment

Either way, there’s no trumping these recipes—no improving upon, no besting, no waxing poetic. It’s game over, roll the credits. And perfect your mic drop technique:

Here are the dishes that we pretend broke the internet, but really just make us happy:

There are four pounds of cherries.

Imagine a chicken pot pie where every bite has a significant amount of crust. This is that pie.

The bottom gets griddled. And you stick an egg in a bagel hole. What other questions do you have?

Hello these are deep-fried.

It's like turducken but for dessert.

A squash in a squash in a squash in a squash in a squash in a squash.

Three heads of kale, three cups of heavy cream, one dish.

You spread butter and sugar over the matzo before it even meets chocolate.

There's no crust, but there is 1 1/2 pounds of pasta in the shape of a deep-dish pie.

Graham crackers but in cake form.

Put one stick of salted butter in this ice cream. Do it.

Cronuts are the default answer for "best mashup food." The real answer is this monkey bread, pull-apart bread, and scone hybrid.

A can of Campbell's tomato soup turns into cake—it's good, not a dare.

Okay, there's more. We can't help ourselves—call us nutty, or genius.

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From our new podcast network, The Genius Recipe Tapes is lifelong Genius hunter Kristen Miglore’s 10-year-strong column in audio form, featuring all the uncut gems from the weekly column and video series. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts so you don’t miss out.

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See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • Judith Roud
    Judith Roud
  • FoodieYogi
    FoodieYogi
  • Erin Jeanne McDowell
    Erin Jeanne McDowell
  • Ali Slagle
    Ali Slagle
  • Anna D
    Anna D
Editor/writer/stylist. Author of I Dream of Dinner (so You Don't Have To). Last name rhymes with bagel.

8 Comments

Judith R. November 18, 2015
It all looks delicious, but aren't there any actual carnivores on your staff?? Lots of kale, squash and sugar...but just a token chicken pot pie. Nothing wonderfully fishy or meaty...
 
FoodieYogi November 12, 2015
What is the main picture of?
 
Ali S. November 12, 2015
This skillet cookie: https://food52.com/blog/11809-how-to-turn-a-giant-melty-cookie-into-a-dinner-party-dessert
 
FoodieYogi November 12, 2015
Amazing.
 
Ali S. November 12, 2015
Exactly.
 
Erin J. November 12, 2015
I really like making things in extra deep springform pans, apparently. ????
 
Anna D. November 18, 2015
I received one as a wedding gift eleven years ago and have never used it. I will now!
 
Anna D. November 18, 2015
I'm thinking something like the pasta pie, but with crepes. That'd work, right? Butter and almond paste. Cherries?