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She's the Washington Post's New Cooking Editor – and Has the Recipes To Prove It - UVA Today

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The work requires curiosity and good people skills. Also, “You have to be detail-oriented, because goodness knows recipes are all about the details,” she said.

“What I love about recipes and baking is that there is so much science and detail to it,” she said enthusiastically. “I mean, it’s a formula, right?” If you follow the directions, you know what the end result will be.”

What Will My Kid Eat?

Krystal can be found in the Washington Post’s test kitchen on 1301 K Street Northwest, creating and testing recipes most days, when she’s not responding to readers’ real-time questions on the paper’s live food chat.

This time of year, home cooks are looking for lighter, warm-weather food that doesn’t require a hot oven. One tasty answer is her take on a Caprese salad.

“A simple Caprese salad made with the best in-season summer tomatoes and good mozzarella is a thing of beauty,” Krystal wrote in the Post. “Just a few ingredients – and a few minutes – gets you this Italian classic.”

She layers the juicy summer fruit with fresh basil, generous pinches of room-temperature buffalo or cow’s milk mozzarella, cracked black pepper, flecks of sea salt and a drizzle of fine olive oil.

The mother of a first-grader, Krystal is also all about easy meals that sometimes pack a sneaky nutritional punch. Enter her family-friendly spinach pesto.

Loaded with potassium and vitamin A, Krystal said baby spinach “breaks down to almost nothing, volume-wise, when run through the food processor.” After testing her concoctions, she settled on a two-to-one ratio of the leafy vegetable and basil that was a winner in her house.

Winner, Winner Air Fryer Dinner

Air fryer recipes are also popular with her readers, so Krystal always homes in on those.

“Sometimes I think in my head; ‘Ooh, I just had this idea for a dish, and I really want to make it,” she said.

One of those things is orange chicken, a shopping mall food court and carryout staple. Looking for a healthier version, she created her popular air fryer orange tofu.

Once Krystal nailed crisping the soy-based cubes to perfection, she set about making the sauce. It needed to be sticky, sweet and a little spicy. After trial and error, she settled on the ideal blend.

“So, there’s honey,” she detailed. “I want the orange flavor, right? Because that’s the predominant flavor. Let me try orange zest and juice. That’s great,” she went on. “Spicy? OK, red pepper flakes. But there’s a little tartness. So, I put a little vinegar and salt.”

Flavor and science.

The result, readers say, is a highly rated, mouth-puckering delight.

Best Pantry Staples and Underrated Quesadillas

Krystal said eggs and beans will take you far. Both are loaded with protein. Honestly, frozen vegetables are great because you can throw them into fried rice and you can make soup,” she added.

What does her family eat in a pinch? “Quesadillas,” she said, especially during the pandemic. “My son eats them way more than I do, but when we’re like, ‘What are we going to eat?’ (And) if I don’t have any other plans, I will make a batch of beans in the Instant Pot” and serve bean and cheese quesadillas.

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She's the Washington Post's New Cooking Editor – and Has the Recipes To Prove It - UVA Today
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