
Stews, Airfryers and Picky Plates: How the World Cooks for Comfort Now
As winter grips the Southern Hemisphere and summer parties bloom in the north, home cooks everywhere are turning to simple, thrifty recipes that promise warmth, connection and zero waste.
In a Buenos Aires kitchen, as a mass of polar air pushed temperatures below zero, a pot of guiso de osobuco simmered on the stove. The aroma of slow-cooked beef, mushrooms and sweet vegetables filled the room, a sensory promise of warmth against the cold snap that had settled over much of Argentina. Nutritionists quoted in local media had urged the public to seek out hot, energy-dense meals—lentil stews, locro, casseroles—to help the body retain heat. This particular recipe, published in a La Plata newspaper, called for patience: the osso buco was first seared, then left to braise with tomatoes, peppers and peas until the meat fell from the bone. It was, the article noted, the kind of dish that tasted even better the next day, its flavours deepened by rest.
Thousands of kilometres away, a different kind of kitchen alchemy was unfolding on social media. Sara Conde, a Spanish creator known as @burppe_vet, had just released a cookbook dedicated to the airfryer, a device that has become a staple in many homes for its speed and versatility. Her recipe for an express pizza, which swaps traditional dough for stacked sheets of rice paper hydrated with egg, promised a crispy base in under 12 minutes. The video amassed millions of views, part of a digital ecosystem where quick, resourceful cooking hacks travel across languages and continents. In Colombia, meanwhile, a chef shared a recipe for spaghetti with ground beef that, he wrote, would remind diners of their mother’s cooking—a dish of finely diced vegetables, paprika and cumin, finished with achiote oil, evoking the midday meals of a Bogotá childhood.
This global turn toward resourceful, comforting food is not merely a matter of taste. In Argentina, the lesser-known beef cut called tortuguita has gained traction as a budget-friendly alternative for stews and braises, its firm fibres softening over hours of low heat. Australian food writer Alice Zaslavsky recently codified the art of the ‘picky plate’—a zero-effort meal assembled from refrigerator odds and ends, using an acronym to ensure a balance of pickles, seasonal vegetables, crunch, a protein anchor and something creamy. The Sydney Morning Herald’s Good Food section, meanwhile, curated its most popular one-pot recipes, from chicken to vegetarian, noting the deep satisfaction of a pot that demands little attention. Even in Zurich, where summer was just beginning, a newspaper offered eight simple recipes for a ‘white summer party’, a trend of elegant outdoor dinners where guests dress in white and bring dishes in baskets, favouring ease over extravagance.
What links these scenes is a common approach: cooking that demands little but gives much. The airfryer pizza and the slow-simmered stew both speak to a desire for meals that fit into lives pressed for time and money, yet still deliver the sensory comforts of a home-cooked dish. The Colombian spaghetti, with its finely chopped sofrito, and the Australian picky plate, with its tin of sardines and crunch of crackers, are expressions of a culinary pragmatism that crosses hemispheres. In the Argentine winter, a bowl of noodle soup enriched with shredded chicken, legumes and spinach becomes a shield against the cold; in a Swiss summer, a table laid with white linen and simple salads becomes a stage for conviviality. The sound of a pot quietly bubbling, the scent of caramelised onion and garlic, the first bite of a crisp rice-paper pizza—these are the small, shared rituals of a world cooking its way through the seasons.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
In Argentina, winter is faced with creativity in the kitchen: from the airfryer to the traditional stew, the secret is making do with what you have. Cheap cuts like the 'tortuguita' and tricks to enrich a simple noodle soup become acts of daily resistance against the cold. The scent of stew is the scent of home, a warm embrace that doesn't weigh on the wallet.
Winter is the best season, and the return of the one-pot is its crowning glory. From fast family dinners with a packet of mince to the art of the 'picky plate' assembled from fridge odds and ends, the message is clear: comfort food doesn't need to be complicated. It's about warmth, practicality, and a touch of playful irony.
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