Favor please? Can someone with NYT access post the Lucali salad recipe? NYT "beef"

monj

Well-known member
I subscribed when they said the digital subscription included the cooking site. Then as we know, they yanked it. I still have a digital subscription and am rankled when the site won't let me view a recipe that was included as part of a published article. I think I should be able to view those recipes. I understand about the rest of the site, monetizing, etc.

I used to be able to view this recipe, now I can't. smileys/frown.gif

Thanks!

M

 
Tried searching elsewhere--I will turn up he list of ingredients, but not the method. Thanks!

 
Here's a tip regarding NYT and more

if you have a library card most libraries give members access to NYTimes. I think it works 24 hours at a time but as far as I know there is no limit to how often you use it. So if you went back later you just need to get the new (instant) code from you library account. Weirdly since the last time that I logged in about two weeks ago, I have not hit the pay wall at NYT so I don't know what that is about but I've had full, unlimited access logging in with my library access just one time.

Also a bunch of other good stuff from the library. When the pandemic started I was able to get my Library card re-activated via text message after several years of non use. I was shocked that it worked. The librarian responded to me in less than 24 hours and fixed my account. Then I got a bunch of good services for watching movies, courses, magazines etc.

via my library account, I connected: hoopla, RBdigital, Kanopy and IndieFlix. Hoopla and Kanopy have some movies that you'd recognize as big mainstream, and there are also a bunch of good content like "Great Courses."
On my Roku TV hoopla, kanopy and IndieFlix have apps and everything works like regular TV.

 
Good to know--thank you. Cardless at the moment

I had one in the current county we're in, but we moved and I'm in online admin hell trying to get the card re-issued with new info and address. (they won't issue a new card)

The salad gods don't want me to make this salad today, but DH did!--LOL.

 
Here you go.

INGREDIENTS
FOR THE SALAD:
5 smallish tomatoes, halved and cut into fifths
½ smallish red onion, peeled and thinly sliced
1 rib celery with leaves, ideally from the heart, chopped
18 canned, pitted black olives, plus 2 tablespoons olive brine
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1 teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
1 teaspoon lemon pepper
â…“ cup olive oil
1 teaspoon red-wine vinegar
1 head iceberg lettuce, outer leaves and brown bits removed, roughly torn
FOR THE DRESSING:
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons olive oil
½ cup red-wine vinegar
½ teaspoon kosher salt
½ teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper
½ teaspoon lemon pepper
Add to Your Grocery List
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional Information
PREPARATION
Combine the tomatoes, red onion and celery in a large bowl. Add the olives, bruising each slightly between finger and thumb, and the olive brine.
Add the salt, peppers, olive oil and red-wine vinegar to the bowl, and mix gently with your hands or a wooden spoon. Cover with plastic wrap, and place in refrigerator for a minimum of 20 minutes and up to 2 hours.
Wash and dry the lettuce, then put in a bowl, cover and place in the refrigerator until ready to assemble the salad.
Make the dressing. There will be a lot left over, which you can cover and store in the refrigerator for up to a few weeks. Combine the olive oil, red-wine vinegar, salt, black pepper and lemon pepper in a jar or large bowl. Cover the jar, and shake until emulsified, or use a whisk to achieve the same result in the bowl. Set aside.
Assemble the salad. Spoon onto a large platter enough of the tomato mixture and accumulated juices to cover its bottom. Arrange some of the iceberg across the top of the tomatoes, and drizzle a little dressing over it. Add some more of the tomato mixture, then another round of the iceberg. Drizzle with some more of the dressing, and then repeat. Serve immediately, so the lettuce does not wilt, either with Italian bread or topped with meatballs, perhaps alongside spaghetti or pizza.

 
They give the meatball recipe but not the salad. I have a feeling NYT

put the salad on "lockdown." Perhaps scored an exclusive. Thanks Gay!

 
Glad to do it. That one copied really easily and if I had known that I would have done it

in the first place. I copy many for our kids and usually have to edit out a LOT of stuff, which was the reason I didn't do it first!!
Any time. We are paper subscribers-- a real luxury I can't seem to do without, so can get whatever you want.

 
I agree with Paul on all that (I watch ACORN on RB) except I couldn't access

recipes that went along with the NYTimes food article even when using the library's free daily access. NYTimes recipe firewall popped up immediately when I would click on the recipe link. THAT was tantalizingly frustrating. Note my (enter post 1, enter post 2, enter post 3, ad nauseum) where I asked if someone here could get the recipe for me after reading the article. And someone always helped out.

Eventually the daily library access didn't work anymore and the 10 article limit crept back into play. I don't know if somehow my email login over-wrote the one from the library daily access, but I couldn't even read articles anymore after the monthly limit was reached.

That's when I paid the $1/week access fee and thought that included the recipes. It didn't. Then I paid $40 for one year access to NYT recipes. I still don't have full NYTimes access--that was $15 a week (?) but I've been able to get any recipe I need now.

This could be a per-library issue. I know the NC library system only pays for a limited number of audiobooks; while I am able to download a wider range of audiobooks using Mom's Pittsburgh Carnegie library card.

Gods Bless libraries.

PS: NYTimes does have "daily" recipes that are accessible for one day and some that are accessible for 1 week...but I could never figure out the schema for that setup.

 
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