The Veggie: Feeding me softly
Coconut saag, soondubu jjigae and haluski answer the question, “What if you could eat a hug?”
The Veggie

January 16, 2025

Creamy white beans with herb oil are shown in a blue bowl with a spoon and bread nearby.
Colu Henry’s creamy white beans with herb oil. Linda Xiao for The New York Times

A big bowl of soft

“I wish you liked soup,” I texted a friend last week. A stinging cold front had moved in, and I could think of nothing else to make us for dinner that night. His aversion to broth-based meals makes planning a cozy evening in a bit of a puzzle for me, a card-carrying soup lover — and flies in the face of his otherwise impeccable taste.

“Absolute waste of a wish,” he replied.

Very well, then. With soup off the table, I had to look inward. What did I want, really? I wanted something warm, easy to prepare and soothing. I wanted a big bowl of soft.

So a big bowl of soft we had: A puddle of Priya Krishna’s everyday dal bleeding into her coconut saag, a combination of dishes that answers the question, “What if you could eat a hug?”

Crunchy, crispy, crackly dishes may dominate the recipe attention economy, but they are decidedly not hugs. They are palm-numbing high-fives. Eric Kim’s recipe for pan-seared radicchio with soft cheese, however, is a loving embrace. “Soft” is right there in the name! It’s a delightful wintertime skillet snack for two, or you can make it a meal alongside Colu Henry’s creamy (read: soft!) white beans with herb oil and some squishy focaccia.

Creamy White Beans With Herb Oil

View this recipe.

Haluski, the Central and Eastern European dish that combines buttery cabbage and onion with plush noodles or dumplings, is a master class in soft eating. Ali Slagle has you covered with a recipe that is as easy as it is economical.

A platter of lentils equally delivers in softness and affordability, and the flavor combinations are limitless. Spice them up with Ali’s lentils diavolo; brighten them with Yotam Ottolenghi’s confit leeks with lentils, lemon and cream. Or perfume them with nutty brown butter: Yossy Arefi’s five-star brown butter lentil and sweet potato salad is a soft-food fan’s paradise.

Samantha Seneviratne’s new recipe for pillowy and gentle Japanese sweet potatoes with maple-tahini crème fraîche doubles down on soft. As does Kay Chun’s white soondubu jjigae, a delicate stew of wiggly silken tofu and tender radish, mushrooms and zucchini, suspended in a clear, savory broth.

And while not right for my soup-averse friend, Kay’s creamy potato leek soup (swap the chicken stock for a robust vegetable stock to make it vegetarian) or Melissa Clark’s nourishing Parmesan cabbage soup (use a vegetarian cheese) may be right for you.

Two servings of white soondubu jjigae (mild tofu stew) are shown in beige bowls with a bowl of rice and spoons nearby.
Christopher Simpson for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

White Soondubu Jjigae (Mild Tofu Stew)

View this recipe.

Steamed red Japanese sweet potatoes are shown split open and dolloped with maple-tahini crème fraîche.
Armando Rafael for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Samantha Seneviratne.

Japanese Sweet Potatoes With Maple-Tahini Crème Fraîche

View this recipe.

Brown butter lentil and sweet potato salad is shown in a blue bowl with a serving spoon.
Yossy Arefi for The New York Times (Photography and Styling)

Brown Butter Lentil and Sweet Potato Salad

View this recipe.

One More Thing

Tejal Rao, our critic at large and the former ringmaster of this newsletter, has been reporting on the devastating fires in Los Angeles, where she lives. I encourage you to spend some time with her latest. It’s about a network of home gardeners in Altadena, Calif., who are working to build a seed bank there that will be essential to restoring the area, home to thousands of acres of woodlands, streams and undeveloped land. The effort is helmed by a University of California naturalist and master gardener.

“Within a day,” Tejal writes, “people were dropping off seed packets — bladderpod and desert globemallow seeds, poppy seeds from ‘Sue’s yard in Pasadena’ and brickellbush from ‘a south facing slope in Topanga Canyon.’”

Thanks for reading, and see you next week.

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