Recipe rabbit holes
May 15, 2025 by DarcieIt’s easy to run down a recipe rabbit hole on the internet. One click leads you to an article about a particular dish, then you follow tangents until you have forgotten the impetus for the original click. That just happened to me: I clicked on a masa pancake recipe on Epicurious, which contained a link to sources of fresh masa around the US. That click led me to a Minneapolis tortilleria that sold its products at various co-ops in the Twin Cities. From there, I search for the co-op nearest my office. (I’m now in downtown St. Paul after 15 years in downtown Minneapolis and I have to learn where to shop all over again, which is both an exciting adventure and a real drag, depending on whether I am in a hurry or not.)

Once at the co-op website I discover that CSAs have drop-offs at that location, so it’s off to research CSAs in the area. I learn that one is the Hmong American Farmers Association, whose headquarters I visited a couple of years ago. When I take the scenic route home, I drive by the headquarters and main farm, where multiple plots dotted with small equipment sheds line either side of US Route 52. I now have to text a neighbor to see if she would be interested in splitting a full share. By now I have pretty much forgotten about the masa pancake recipe, but I kept the tab open, so I eventually circle back to it about an hour after the first click. In my estimation that’s an hour well spent.
Although clicking on links makes it easy to get lost in recipe land, I also run into rabbit holes when I’m reading physical cookbooks. Sometimes I will look for a particular dish (obviously using EYB to locate the books and pages), and pull out several volumes to do side-by-side comparisons. Quite often I will notice another recipe when flipping through to the recipe I was originally researching, and this will lead me to pull more books off the shelf because I now have a new direction to explore.
Other times I will randomly pull a book off the shelf because it speaks to me in the moment. As I flip through the pages I will be likely be reminded of another recipe in a different book, and down the rabbit hole I go again. In both scenarios, I end up with a tall stack of books to put away, precariously piled on the chair next to the bookshelves, but I have satisfied a culinary itch. Just as with the online rabbit hole, I find this exercise to be time well spent: I have either learned about a new dish or rediscovered an old favorite. I am now armed with the tools I need to get in the kitchen and cook. The trouble is, it’s now 10:00 pm and time to get ready for bed. Oh well, there’s always tomorrow.
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