
6 plum recipes to showcase the sweet and savory sides of the fruit
Nothing piquing your interest? Check out our database of more than 10,000 recipes for other delicious ideas.
Vinegar and a tablespoon or two of sugar play up the tart and sweet vibes of the fruit to pair with seared pork chops. Get the recipe.
Summer squash and plums sit on a bed of creamy, whipped cheese and get a sprinkle of chopped nuts or seeds for a wonderful mix of flavors and textures. Get the recipe.
Plums and red onion form a jammy, sweet/tart complement to chicken thighs seasoned with cinnamon, coriander and garlic powder. Get the recipe.
This Mediterranean-inspired salad features radicchio, plums, walnuts, dates and mint tossed in a creamy, vegan dressing with tahini and sumac. Get the recipe.
Cardamom adds warmth and fragrance to these frozen treats sweetened with honey. Get the recipe.
There's no need to turn on the oven for this comforting stovetop dessert featuring fruit stewed with brandy and served alongside plump dumplings flavored with warming spices. Get the recipe.
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a day ago
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6 plum recipes to showcase the sweet and savory sides of the fruit
Plums were recently on my mind as I was thinking of seasonal produce and brainstorming recipe ideas for my Dinner in Minutes column. The result was a skillet chicken, featured below. The process opened my mind to the possibilities of the summer stone fruit, helping me realize that while they are generally associated with desserts, plums are just as welcome in savory dishes, thanks to their range of flavors, including tart, sweet and everything in between. You'll find that versatility in these sweet and savory recipes that highlight the stone fruit. Nothing piquing your interest? Check out our database of more than 10,000 recipes for other delicious ideas. Vinegar and a tablespoon or two of sugar play up the tart and sweet vibes of the fruit to pair with seared pork chops. Get the recipe. Summer squash and plums sit on a bed of creamy, whipped cheese and get a sprinkle of chopped nuts or seeds for a wonderful mix of flavors and textures. Get the recipe. Plums and red onion form a jammy, sweet/tart complement to chicken thighs seasoned with cinnamon, coriander and garlic powder. Get the recipe. This Mediterranean-inspired salad features radicchio, plums, walnuts, dates and mint tossed in a creamy, vegan dressing with tahini and sumac. Get the recipe. Cardamom adds warmth and fragrance to these frozen treats sweetened with honey. Get the recipe. There's no need to turn on the oven for this comforting stovetop dessert featuring fruit stewed with brandy and served alongside plump dumplings flavored with warming spices. Get the recipe.


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'The big difference, for me — I have been seeing more people wearing flip-flops in the city,' said Lawrence Schlossman, the co-host of the menswear podcast 'Throwing Fits.' 'That is different.' Obviously people have always worn flip-flops by the pool or at the beach, but now they have become a more everyday shoe option. 'People wearing them with jeans to get beers with the homies at Fanelli — that definitely is a new development.' In late July, the Venice Beach-based designer Eli Russell Linnetz released his brand ERL's own take on the high-end flip-flop, in 'Low' ($185), a five-inch platform 'Big' ($375) and an outrageous eight-inch-sole 'Huge' ($1250, available by request only). Within minutes, he said, the flip-flops sold out. He accompanied their release with some of his signature imagery, which is often highly sexualized to the point of hilarious discomfort or lascivious escapism or both. (Linnetz has shot covers for GQ Magazine and directed Kanye West's 'Fade' music video, and is also in preproduction for his first film.) Here, there was a female model riding a male model, both nude except for their flip flops, and another nude model posing like a Greek statue (or a Versace model ad from the label's 1990s prime) in the Huge. Before Instagram took down the post of the couple, Linnetz said, it had over 5 million views. 'People loved it or hated it,' he said. ERL, which Linnetz launched in 2020, has long used flip-flops almost as its uniform shoe, styling them with suiting, gym clothes. While he produces many styles of shoe, he produced the flip-flop as a mischievous way to remind consumers that he was the first designer to put his finger on the style as a fashion object. 'It felt like someone was stealing a piece of something that was always a part of who we are,' he said. 'It's like the line from 'Titanic.'' He giggled, recalling a scene between Rose and Jack in the film. 'She was like, I'm in a room screaming at the top of my lungs and no one can hear me. So that's where the big flip-flops came from.' The flip flop frenzy marks a larger turn in fashion: a movement away from the Y2K redux styles that have dominated for several years, and more toward a mall-jock breed of prep. 'If we were to look at the last couple major fashion trends, with how things evolved from normcore to Y2K — the look that had not been mined until recently was like, the Abercrombie, Hollister, Pacsun kind of preppy,' said Schlossman. Shoppers have plundered the archives of the Gap, Hot Topic and 'The next thing, the obvious extension is, 'What is the part of the mall that we haven't hit?'' He points to designers Linnetz, Raimundo Langlois, whose clothes are like a Tina Barney imagining of Abercrombie's controversial early 2000s catalogues, and stylist Marcus Allen of the Society Archive, who often pulls vintage Abercrombie for his photoshoots, for pushing the fashion narrative in this direction over the past few years. Now, larger brands like Jonathan Anderson's Dior, Pharrell's Louis Vuitton and Michael Rider's Celine are adapting that popped collar mentality. And the flip-flop, the go-to shoe for bros clad in cargo pants and tight polos, is this style's most accessible product. 'Not everyone wants a huge cargo short. Not everyone wants a tiny cute polo that's going to show off your midriff, or puka shell necklaces or whatever,' said Schlossman. 'But flip-flops, they're always there. We're always on the beach. We're always going to be at the pool. It's going to be hot: Let the dogs breathe.' While Havaianas, which sell for about $30, have been embraced as an affordable fashion it-item in the vein of Adidas Stan Smiths or Birkenstocks, it is the Row's $690 Dune that has been the point of controversy. Is it ridiculous to spend that much on a rubber and grosgrain sandal when there is no label or special design to let the world know what you forked over for it? 'One side of the argument is like, flip flops are gross, stupid, childish, immature, not sophisticated. You know, who wants to see a man's feet in the street?' said Schlossman, who has a $50 dupe of the Row's style. 'Then I think you have the other side, which is the more consumerist approach to menswear, where it's like, F--- it, we ball. There's a sprinkling of that joie de vivre: it's summer, it's fun.' 'The Row exists as this monolithic tasteful thing. You might disagree with the price point,' he continued, but that makes it almost like armor for men. 'The guy who wears the Row, knows that it's the Row, and he's like, I'm good. I know I'm leaving the house feeling good because I have on the Row.' Linnetz's work, while materially similar to The Row in its almost anthropological plundering of California sartorial archetypes, is much more subversive, and therefore more revealing of the psychological underpinnings of flip-flop mania. Perhaps the high school bully — lacrosse captain, homecoming king — is now fashion's muse. 'When I started ERL,' Linnetz said, 'I always was like, I don't care if it's ugly, I want to do something uncomfortable. I want to do stuff even that I hate. Just to challenge myself and expand my way of thinking. It was odd to me that people would say, 'Why don't you just make things you like?' My process was: I just want to make things that are uncomfortable for myself.' Or comfortable for your feet.