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Our 25 Most Popular Recipes of 2026 So Far

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Our 25 Most Popular Recipes of 2026 So Far

Here are a few things that I’m finding hard to believe: 2026 is more than half over. I have a high schooler. And The New York Times Cooking’s mighty recipes team has published over 400 recipes since Jan. 1. Time, as they say, is a thief, but at least we have so many wonderful recipes to show for it (even if my high schooler still thinks I’m unbearably, impossibly lame).

Below are the 25 recipes that have been viewed the most. (You can see the top 50 over here.) With the exception of two “project” recipes, they’re all easy, affordable and healthy meals that you return to again and again, which thrills us to pieces. We love knowing that we are helping you feed yourselves and your loved ones, day after day, delicious bite after delicious bite.

A golden brown breaded cutlet with a creamy cucumber salad and lemon slices on a white plate. A fork holds a piece of the cutlet.

Credit…David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Cyd Raftus McDowell.

If you think making chicken cutlets is not for you, Sue Li is here to show you how it’s done. First, cut the breasts into cutlets. Then, pound them until thin. (This increases the surface area, which creates more real estate for crispy breading and helps the breasts cook more evenly.) Next, gently shake the pan while it fries to puff up the breading. And finally, add salt right after it’s cooked. The chicken is served with a fresh, herby cucumber salad that cuts through the richness.

Recipe: Chicken Schnitzel With Cucumber Salad

Glazed chicken thighs and sweet potatoes on a sheet pan. Green scallions are scattered across the dish, while a metal spatula rests on the pan.

Credit…Joseph De Leo for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.

Delightfully sticky-sweet marmalade is the magic maker of this sheet-pan dinner from Melissa Clark. The bittersweet preserve — orange, lemon or grapefruit or a combination will work here — is mixed with fish sauce, soy sauce, garlic and crushed red pepper, and then slathered all over chicken and sweet potatoes. Roasted in a hot oven, the chicken and sweet potatoes develop a beautiful caramelized exterior.

Recipe: Spicy Marmalade Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

Pan-fried dumplings with crispy browned tops arranged over dark green kale garnished with sesame seeds and scallions in a silver pan.

Credit…Ghazalle Badiozamani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Ali Slagle has a knack for turning something simple into something special. Here, frozen dumplings — you choose the kind — are seared in a skillet. Kale is sautéed with ginger and garlic, and then dumplings are plopped on top to steam with the greens until everything is cooked through. A simple finish of vinegar and soy sauce brightens it all up.

Recipe: One-Pan Dumplings With Greens

A bowl of rigatoni pasta in a creamy, light brown sauce, topped with black pepper. A silver fork is inserted into the pasta.

Credit…Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.

“French onion” is bound to pique a home cook’s interest no matter the recipe, but this Toni Chapman dish is more than just talk. Slow-caramelized onions, pasta starch and melted Gruyère come together to create a rich, glossy sauce, no flour required.

Recipe: One-Pot French Onion Rigatoni

A dark plate holds a salad of light green cabbage, sliced cucumber, cooked chicken and roasted cashews.

Credit…Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

If you like a creamy chicken salad but could do without the mayo, Andy Baraghani has this recipe for you. Cashew butter stands in for the mayo, while soy sauce, fresh lemon juice and a little honey enliven everything. Full of cooked chicken, cabbage, cucumbers and roasted cashews, this salad makes a great potluck addition or very happy desk lunch.

Recipe: Spicy and Creamy Cashew Chicken Salad

A light green bowl with rice, purple cabbage, golden tofu cubes, cashews, scallions and cilantro. Two serving utensils are visible.

Credit…Armando Rafael for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Cyd Raftus McDowell.

Toasted rice is cooked in coconut milk for a rich, fragrant base to this gorgeous, textured salad from Kayla Hoang. The rice, seared ponzu-marinated tofu, cabbage, scallions, cilantro and a drinkable dressing of honey, Sriracha, garlic, ginger, coconut milk and ponzu are combined to make this a meal worthy of the label “dinner.”

Recipe: Toasted Coconut Rice Salad

Creamy macaroni and cheese in a blue pot, covered with crispy golden bread crumbs. A wooden spoon is partially submerged in the dish.

Credit…Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Monica Pierini.

If you’ve ever enjoyed a bowl of boxed mac and cheese with a little squiggle of ketchup stirred in, you’re going to love this elevated Cheddar tomato mac from Ali Slagle. Tomato paste, garlic and paprika are sizzled in butter, and then pasta and water are added. The pasta’s starches thicken the liquid, which gets a big handful of grated Cheddar, creating a glossy, savory sauce.

Recipe: One-Pot Cheddar Tomato Mac

Two sweet potato halves on a dark blue plate, covered with vibrant green pesto and roasted chickpeas.

Credit…Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.

When Pete Wells, the former Times restaurant critic, wrote about changing his eating habits, he offered this recipe. Boiling sweet potatoes instead of roasting them slows the rate at which their sugars are absorbed into the bloodstream, as does eating them in their jackets, which contain fiber. Topping them with an herby chermoula and protein-packed roasted chickpeas makes it a full, satisfying meal.

Recipe: Seared Sweet Potatoes With Chermoula

A close-up of chicken and rice with green peas and fresh herbs in a white cooking pot. Two lemon wedges are placed at the edge of the dish. A spoon is visible.

Credit…Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.

Dan Pelosi knows how to make the most of a jar of pesto. Here, he combines it with boneless chicken thighs, garlic, rice, herbs and peas for a one-pot dinner that you’re going to want to add to the rotation.

Recipe: Chicken and Pesto Rice With Peas

A close-up view of a dark teal bowl filled with white rice, yellow curry with tofu and sweet potato chunks, green peas and peanuts. It is garnished with a lime wedge and cilantro.

Credit…Kelly Marshall for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Roscoe Betsill. Prop Stylist: Sarah Smart.

Peanut butter — or almond, cashew or sunflower butter — do the hard work in this weeknight recipe from Hetty Lui McKinnon. It adds a toasty richness and creamy texture to this cozy dish that doesn’t feel the least bit heavy or nap-inducing.

Recipe: Tofu and Sweet Potato Peanut Butter Curry

A golden brown loaf of banana bread, with two slices cut, on a marble serving board. A small bowl of butter and a knife are in the background.

Credit…Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.

Jake and Maggie Gyllenhaal came to the NYT Cooking studio to make the banana bread that their mom, Naomi Foner, used to bake for them when they were kids. It’s a classic iteration, and everyone loves it.

Recipe: Jake and Maggie Gyllenhaal’s Banana Bread

A dark gray bowl of creamy soup, with sausage, mushrooms, green spinach and wide lasagna pasta. There are lemon wedges in a small bowl next to the soup.

Credit…Andrew Bui for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Kaitlin Wayne.

This special soup from Toni Chapman is inspired by the flavors of white lasagna: browned Italian sausage, sautéed mushrooms, a touch of cream and a hit of lemon.

Recipe: Creamy Lasagna Soup

A bowl with chickpeas, creamy cheese and green basil. A golden, crusty bread piece and a spoon are visible.

Credit…Armando Rafael for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Brett Regot.

Inspired by spaghetti al limone, Hetty Lui McKinnon serves up a new and exciting way to eat chickpeas. The beans braise in their own liquid, called aquafaba, which helps the lemon juice and oil emulsify into a silky sauce. Burrata is added for creaminess and heft.

Recipe: Chickpeas al Limone With Burrata

Roasted broccoli, white beans and golden croutons in a white bowl. The dish is topped with grated cheese, crushed red pepper and a fork.

Credit…Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.

Kristina Felix delivers a mash-up of panzanella and Caesar salad in this clever recipe of roasted broccoli, white beans and chewy-crisp croutons. Not only are there beans in the salad, but some of them are also smashed into the creamy, garlicky dressing.

Recipe: Broccoli and White Bean Caesar

A metal sheet pan filled with shrimp, golden brown crispy rice and green scallions. A silver spoon rests on the food.

Credit…David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Hadas Smirnoff.

Melissa Clark’s brain is a national treasure. Here, she tosses cooked rice with sesame oil, scallions and a little salt onto a sheet pan and lets it crisp in the oven. Then, she tops it with shrimp that’s been marinated in garlic, ginger, sesame oil and fish sauce and slides it back into the oven to cook through. So brilliant, so easy.

Recipe: Sheet-Pan Scallion Shrimp With Crispy Rice

Bright green spaghetti coated in sauce, topped with white grated cheese, in a light blue pan. A wooden spoon is resting in the sauce.

Credit…Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

Cottage cheese is more than just a vehicle for fruit. Ali Slagle whizzes it with fresh spinach, basil and Parmesan to make a gorgeous green pasta sauce that tastes like a perfect medley of pesto and Alfredo. Be sure to use freshly grated Parmesan. The preground stuff will cause your sauce to clump.

Recipe: Creamy Cottage Cheese Basil Pasta

A dark bowl of green soup filled with white beans, broccoli and barley. A metal spoon rests in the soup.

Credit…Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.

Pete Wells adapted this hearty, fiber-rich soup, which hails from Friuli, a region in northeastern Italy where barley is a favorite grain, from Marcella Hazan. She used cauliflower, but this version calls for broccoli, which adds a little color.

Recipe: Broccoli, Barley and Cannellini Bean Soup

Golden brown, flaky potpies on white plates. One crust is intact; the other is broken, revealing a hearty filling and a fork.

Credit…David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

In this recipe, which Wolfgang Puck, the celebrity chef, makes for the Oscars after-party, chunks of tender chicken are bathed in a creamy, sherry-touched base that is infused with thyme and bay leaf. Instead of making double-crust pies, for ease he tops the pies with a single golden round of store-bought puff pastry.

Recipe: Wolfgang Puck’s Chicken Potpie

Two bowls of creamy orecchiette pasta, garnished with fresh green dill and crushed red pepper. A small dish of crushed red pepper is in the background.

Credit…Julia Gartland for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Not your run of the mill pasta, this dish from Melissa Clark combines sautéed silky cabbage and leeks, Gruyère, crème fraîche, smoked paprika and fresh dill for a fiber-rich, cost-effective vegetarian pasta that’ll give you the warm fuzzies.

Recipe: One-Pot Cheesy Orecchiette With Cabbage and Paprika

A clear glass jar of creamy, pale dressing. A white bowl with green, yellow and purple salad greens is to its right.

Credit…Joseph De Leo for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.

Genevieve Ko adapted this multipurpose dressing from the chefs Travis Lett and Ian Robinson, who run RVR in Los Angeles. Silken tofu, miso, rice vinegar, white sesame paste, honey and garlic are blended until smooth to be used as a dressing or a dip for almost anything.

Recipe: Silken Tofu-Miso Dressing

A skillet with several pieces of chicken in a creamy sauce with red tomatoes and green spinach. A metal spatula is lifting one piece.

Credit…Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.

If marry me chicken and chicken Florentine had a baby, this creamy one-pot chicken dish from Dan Pelosi would be it. Browned boneless chicken breasts swim in a rich sauce made with heavy cream and cream cheese, tomatoes, onion, Parmesan and wilted spinach.

Recipe: Creamy Tuscan Chicken

Two white bowls of noodles mixed with cucumber slices, scallions and cilantro are on a marbled surface. Two golden forks are crossed in the foreground.

Credit…Kelly Marshall for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Roscoe Betsill. Prop Stylist: Paige Hicks.

Published last month, Melissa Clark’s superhero noodles have already rocketed to the near-top of the list. A slurry of crunchy peanut butter, sesame oil, chile crisp and lime juice dresses noodles and cucumbers, but the real secret is the addition of crystallized ginger, which gives it all chewy pops of spicy sweetness.

Recipe: Cold Peanut Ginger Noodles

A dark pot of stew with white beans, shredded chicken and dark green leafy vegetables. A wooden spoon is in the broth.

Credit…Rachel Vanni for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Spencer Richards.

Ali Slagle’s hearty, wholesome stew, published in early January, hit the spot for readers looking to reset after a long holiday season or to ward off that winter cold. Add a big squeeze of lemon juice, a shower of Parmesan and a hunk of crusty bread if you’re in the mood.

Recipe: Chicken and White Bean Stew

A hearty brown curry with ground beef, yellow potatoes, green peas and carrots, served in a bowl with a side of white rice. A spoon rests within the curry.

Credit…Joseph De Leo for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.

Ground beef makes this flavorful curry from Amelia Rampe affordable and perfect for a weeknight. The recipe calls for store-bought curry bricks, but you can make your own if you’re feeling ambitious.

Recipe: Japanese Ground Beef Curry

Green and yellow muffin-shaped savory bites on a plate.

Credit…Julia Gartland for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

Readers fell in love with Eric Kim’s high-protein nibbles, which are fluffy and packed with cottage cheese, frozen spinach and scallions. They freeze beautifully, making them a meal prepper’s dream.

Recipe: Spinach Egg Bites

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