Get ready to grill with me
On the menu: grilled hamburgers, jerk ribs, cabbage wedges, marinated tofu, yakitori, soy-basted chicken thighs. ...
Cooking
May 16, 2025
A side image of a cheeseburger layered with lettuce, tomato, onion and pickles, and topped with a sesame seed bun. To the right is a pint of beer.
Sam Sifton’s grilled hamburgers. Christopher Simpson for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. Prop Stylist: Paige Hicks.

It’s May 16. Do you know where your grill is?

Good morning. We’re a week out from Memorial Day weekend, the unofficial start of summer grill season. For those who take part in the festivities, first with a holiday cookout and then with regular meals cooked outside over flames and coal, as many as they can manage for the next few months, the next two days are important.

Because how’s that grill looking, after half a year spent alone and untouched in the yard, on the deck, in the garage, under the stoop? Did you clean it the last time you used it? Do you have charcoal? Do you have propane? Wood chips? Pellets? (Do you even grill, bro?)

This is the weekend to get everything sorted, cleaned and prepped, so that you can head into the holiday with confidence, with equipment that’s ready to serve you as you desire to serve others, in memory of those who gave their lives in service to us all.

I can help because I’m bossy. I can say with confidence (and experience) that if you spend a few hours tomorrow outside and at the hardware store, if you scrub and scrape and test and look around for that great spatula you haven’t used since late September, you can make grilled hamburgers (above) for dinner and count yourself prepared for the season ahead.

My colleagues at Wirecutter, The Times’s product recommendation site, can help because they do more than shout from a bully pulpit. They test, and test again, and test once more, to deliver ideas not just for what equipment you should use to cook, but how to use it, and to what end. (You can sign up for their newsletter here.)

They did this for weeks this year, in advance of this very moment. And they’ve emerged with new recommendations for gas grills, for gas griddles, for barbecue sauce. They can tell you about the best charcoal grill (that’s me in the photograph at the top of the page!), the best pellet smoker and the best tools for grilling, all alongside great advice for how to grill safely, how to detect gas leaks, how to maintain your equipment and much, much more.

So get your work done, and then raise the flames high. Burgers, yes, but ribs and cabbage too, as well as yakitori and tofu and whatever else you want to kiss with flame. (I particularly like these grilled, soy-basted chicken thighs with spicy cashews.) Moderate labor this weekend will leave you happy through Labor Day at least.

Featured Recipe

Grilled Hamburgers

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Of course, the indoor cats will scoff at all of this. Billowing smoke has no place in a studio apartment or fourth-floor condo. That’s just fine. I can make arugula salad with peaches, goat cheese and basil and be just as happy, just as summery, and so can you. So let’s do that this weekend regardless, and ready ourselves for summer 2025.

There are many thousands more recipes to consider cooking this weekend waiting for you on New York Times Cooking. Go see what you find. You need a subscription to do that, of course. Subscriptions support our work and allow it to continue. Please, if you haven’t taken one out yet, would you consider doing so today? Thank you!

And please write for help if you find yourself at odds with our technology or your account: cookingcare@nytimes.com. Someone will get back to you. You can write to me, too, if you’d like to rattle our cage or say something nice: hellosam@nytimes.com. I can’t respond to every letter. But I do read each one I get.

Now, it’s a considerable distance from anything to do with the merits of hickory smoke or the perils of using aftermarket parts to repair your grill (don’t do it! OEM always!), but I just tore through Jordan Harper’s 2023 Los Angeles noir, “Everybody Knows,” and maybe you could do the same. “Every sentence sings with heartache,” The Times wrote in a review.

Our Alissa Wilkinson really didn’t like Neil Burger’s recent thriller, “Inheritance,” shot on an iPhone in far-flung places across the globe. I watched the movie on a plane, though, so all my emotions were heightened. And I liked it far more than I did “Anora.”

I loved these Gillian Laub photographs, in The New Yorker, of prominent New Yorkers in their living rooms.

Finally, here’s ZZ Top, “Bar-B-Q.” Play that while you’re cleaning your grill. I’ll see you on Sunday.

IN THIS NEWSLETTER

A black serving tray holds grilled soy-basted chicken thighs showered with chopped spicy cashews, scallions and cilantro leaves; a small bowl of additional spicy cashews is nearby.

Jessica Emily Marx for The New York Times

Grilled Soy-Basted Chicken Thighs With Spicy Cashews

By Sam Sifton

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled Star

2,824

1 hour

Makes 4 to 6 servings

Article Image

Photograph by Grant Cornett. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Theo Vamvounakis.

Jerk Ribs

Recipe from Harold Dieterle

Adapted by Sam Sifton

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled Star

596

3 1/2 hours

Makes 4 servings

Article Image

Joe Lingeman for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Grilled Cabbage With Paprika-Lime Butter

By Ali Slagle

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarUnfilled Star

276

45 minutes

Makes 4 servings

Three chicken skewers are photographed from the side, sitting on a smoking grill.

Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times

Yakitori (Grilled Chicken Skewers)

By Melissa Clark

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled Star

1,511

15 minutes

Makes 6 appetizer servings

Article Image

Armando Rafael for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Roscoe Betsill.

Grilled Tofu

By Kay Chun

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarUnfilled Star

1,496

20 minutes, plus 6 hours’ marinating

Makes 4 servings

Article Image

Andrew Purcell for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Arugula Salad With Peaches, Goat Cheese and Basil

By Lidey Heuck

Filled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled StarFilled Star

2,408

10 minutes

Makes 4 servings

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