We moved into our house in December. It will be March in a few days. Our interior punch list continues and our landscape crew is still doing construction and planting. I have lots to show-and-tell you next week. In the meantime, I hope you’ll enjoy this week’s free post—please share it if you enjoy reading! Following up from my dinnerware deep dive, get a load of our new plates that arrived yesterday from Kati von Lehman. Aren’t they beauties? Kati makes brown stoneware feel elegant with precise glazing and a dense clay that she works to a thickness that teeters between hefty and fine. (We decided to get 8 plates, rather than 12—how do you feel about set numbers? Let me know in the comments.) This week, I wanted to get back in the kitchen—because our new kitchen is super fun to cook in! I made a Citrus Risotto recipe from Zuni Cafe in San Francisco that was featured in Simply Genius by Kristen Miglore. Judy Rodgers, Zuni’s chef and owner, insisted that all the fuss about having to constantly stir risotto was bunk. She said you can stir it here and there, while doing other kitchen tasks, and you can use any temperature broth you want. No need to keep a pot of carefully simmering stock next to your risotto pot. Risotto chefs: we are now free of all those stodgy old rules! Whoopee! While we’re at it, I’m going to add my own debunking: I learned from a born-in-Italy chef that you don’t need a deep pot for cooking risotto; a shallow braising or frying pan gives you more control over the texture. As you’ll see in my video, I happily flouted all the rules and swerved off course with the risotto (doubled the citrus, and the onion, too)—and it turned out great. I do say so myself. Hope you’ll try it with whatever mix of citrus you have on-hand. Doesn’t this winter need a little brightness? One-Pot Citrus RisottoAdapted from Judy Rodgers Serves 4 to 6 Ingredients 2 tablespoons unsalted butter Instructions 1. Sauté the onion: In a 4-quart (3.8L) saucepan or another medium pot over medium-low heat, melt the butter. Add the onion and a few pinches of salt and cook, stirring regularly with a wooden spoon, until the onion is tender and translucent, about 6 minutes. 2. Simmer the rice: Add the rice and stir until the grains are warm and glossy. Pour in about 2 cups (475ml) of the stock, adjusting the heat to let it gently simmer, then stir occasionally until it has been mostly absorbed. Add another cup (240ml) or so of stock and repeat. The risotto should be starting to look like a porridge. Taste and adjust the seasoning—the rice will still be hard and a little raw tasting. Add another ½ cup (120ml) or so of stock and stir as needed until just absorbed. Taste and adjust the seasoning again. 3. Stir in the citrus: Break the citrus sections into irregular chunks as you add them to the risotto. Add the grapefruit juice—if your grapefruit was very juicy, you may not need much of the remaining stock. 4. Beat in the mascarpone and eat: Taste again: If the rice is still quite firm, add more stock, a tablespoon at a time, and cook until the rice is still just a little firm in the center (al dente). Turn off the heat and aggressively stir in the mascarpone until the risotto is creamy and the citrus is broken down into pretty flecks. Serve immediately. Wondering what knife I used to trim the citrus (and my fingers)? It’s Material Kitchen’s 6” Serrated Knife. I have an obsession with tomato knives and have been eyeing this one for months! And for those seeking more spring-is-so-close recipe ideas, here are some greats from the Homeward archives:
One of the best parts of starting a company is that you get to hire all sorts of talented people, and then watch their careers blossom. Here are just a few of the stars from my Food52 days:
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Friday, February 27, 2026
Creamy, zingy Citrus Risotto is the ultimate spring dish
7 steps to the perfect cozy night in.
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Friday, February 20, 2026
A (self-taught!) American designer on overhauling her London home
A (self-taught!) American designer on overhauling her London homeThe classic Victorian with “great bones in shabby clothes.”
I’ve written about slowly renovating and re-renovating our Brooklyn apartment over the course of 20 years. During this journey, I really wish I’d known Leanne Kilroy, who writes The Good Bones Life. We could have commiserated about the setbacks and frustrations, but also about the satisfactions of working on a home, corner by corner, room by room. My efforts were like doodling compared to Leanne’s fine art. A few years ago, she and her husband bought a down-at-the-heels Victorian home in London—and, while raising her first daughter and having two more children, they crammed into an upper floor of the home while tackling the rest of the house with the blend of ingenuity, grit, and insanity that all DIY renovators possess. Leanne is so great at it that she now runs her own design firm, and has just released her first lighting line, a sweet and handy collection of sconces and pendants designed in collaboration with Plank Hardware. (The line is not yet available in North America but if you’re interested, send her a note—this will help make it happen!) Scroll to the last photo to see some of the lighting in her home, but don’t miss her list of wise and practical tips along the way! Yours in house snooping, Amanda ... Subscribe to Homeward to unlock the rest.Become a paying subscriber of Homeward to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content. A subscription gets you:
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