Newsletter Subject

The Bite (Issue 75): Does a better sense of smell make you a better cook?

From

salon.com

Email Address

newsletters@salon.com

Sent On

Sat, Mar 25, 2023 12:02 PM

Email Preheader Text

Plus, spring recipes On particularly , there are brief moments where it’s like the city has no

Plus, spring recipes [View in browser](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvMXBtMWMwa2lmMS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) On particularly [cold days in Chicago](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbHAxMXRtcmJrNi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~), there are brief moments where it’s like the city has no smell. You tilt your face up towards the winter sun, inhale and there’s just nothing. If an animator wanted to render the phenomenon, they could do so with a few wafting coils of scent — the kind that appear in Looney Tunes cartoons, curling out of [oven doors](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvZ2FsZ3B0YjlyOC8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) and perfume shops — being just absolutely throttled by freezing gusts of wind. That, of course, isn’t reality, as I was reminded last Friday. I was walking home from the library and had just turned down a particularly windy corridor when I was just hit by the overwhelming, malty [smell of beer](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbDVoZTM3cXdjOS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). Quickly, that was followed by the sweet, gentle fishiness of [flaky white fish](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvZzM1cndpMjRwby8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). I had stumbled onto a family’s Lenten fish fry. Behind a chain link fence, stocky men in Chicago Bears sweatshirts clustered around a hissing backyard deep fryer, while a woman standing at the side door shouted at a gaggle of kids playing nearby to be careful. I took another inhale and, though it was quickly getting dark, if I closed my eyes, I could clearly see a paper plate topped with a shatteringly crisp piece of beer-battered cod, cradled by a piece of [pillowy white bread](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvajNyN294djlvdi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) and served with a little paper condiment cup of tartar sauce. It was a meal I had eaten many, many times, but I was still delighted at the way my brain’s synapses connected the familiar smell to a taste memory banked somewhere in the recesses of my mind. Logically, I shouldn’t be surprised. Our senses of taste and smell are intrinsically, biologically linked — a connection by which I’ve been pretty fascinated since covering a neurogastronomy conference in 2015 for [National Geographic](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvd2Z0M3l4M215Zy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). Neurogastronomy is a still relatively new field of study that surveys the ways food impacts human behavior; the term itself was coined by Dr. Gordon Shepherd, who released a [2012 book of the same name](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvYnZldHp5eDQyeC8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). As Shepherd wrote in the opening to his book, as we eat, our brain registers smells spatially, breaking them down and reconstructing them alongside the other senses to construct our sense of “taste.” When people lose their sense of smell — whether because of medical treatments like chemotherapy, sustaining head trauma or, in more recent years, contracting the coronavirus — their sense of taste can often go with it. However, I hadn’t fully appreciated how startling that would be until I lost my sense of smell after getting COVID last August; now, it was only fully gone for about six days, so I am far, far luckier than many. But I still remember how jarring it was when, a few days after testing positive, I held a [bag of coffee](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvMGlpbDhjNnhuMi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~)beans under my nose before brewing a pot and inhaling. Nothing. My stomach sank as I rifled through my fridge and pantry for potent items — [garlic paste](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcnJkd2hiaHl1OS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~), [everything bagels](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvb2NoNzZ3czQ1Zy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~), [vanilla extract](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcTh6dW1pYzg2bS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). I pressed jars and packages up to my face and desperately inhaled, but each time I only got odorless air. It was a long week waiting for it to start to return and then a long month until I felt like it was as sharp as it used to be pre-infection. Unsurprisingly, my appetite suffered pretty greatly during that period. Since my sense of smell has returned, however, I’m definitely more cognizant of the ways in which it informs and enhances my appreciation of food, both as an eater and as a cook. And if you speak with anyone whose livelihoods depend, at least in part, on their abilities to smell and taste — sommeliers, spirits professionals, flavor developers, chefs — they’ll all offer one piece of advice with regards to improving either sense: “Practice.” In a 2017 interview about her book “[Cork Dork: A Wine-Fueled Adventure Among the Obsessive Sommeliers, Big Bottle Hunters, and Rogue Scientists Who Taught Me to Live for Taste](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvb29tcDQ1Z3FzaC8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~),” tech editor-turned-sommelier Bianca Bosker discussed how she had to “learn to tune into this sense, smell, that I was not used to trusting.” She said: Part of the reason we think we’re bad smellers is we’re just not aware of all the smells we take in over the course of the day. In order to internalize smells and hone our sense of smell, we have to attach meaning to odors, and that’s where the language comes into play. There is a sensory scientist at the University of California, Davis who is really the inventor of modern tasting notes. She developed a course that is required for all aspiring winemakers called the Kindergarten of the Nose. It helps people acquire an alphabet of smells, which is something we don’t do as children. You have to develop your smell memory, and expose yourself to different scents. On a practical level, that meant I would wake up in the morning, and describe all the smells I would encounter of the day. When I would shampoo my hair, I would try to put words on the aromas. For the past several months, I’ve tried to do the same thing — essentially constructing a smell map of my community. I live in a primarily Vietnamese neighborhood, in a stretch called [Asia on Argyle](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvY2ltZjAya3Y2My8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) where there are 13 Vietnamese restaurants dotting a three-block stretch. I’ve always loved how, when you get off on the Argyle “L” stop, the air is overwhelmingly fragrant with the smell of [pho broth](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvNWdiNHowM2c0bi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). It felt like one beautiful, nebulous, neighborhood-encompassing smell, but once I started paying more attention, I realized that there were these little pockets of nuance where one particular scent rose to the top: sweet, woody cloves; licorice-like star anise; the rich, slightly metallic smell of[beef bones](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbjRmbzIwZmlhNS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) rendering. There are a few bakeries, as well as a [pizza](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvZDg0NjdqdHhpbi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) and empanada shop, along the walk home. When all their ovens are firing, like on weekday mornings just as the rest of the city is waking up, the street smells sweet, yeasty and warm. I aspire to the kind of mastery of scent where I can detect whether it’s a batch of [croissants](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvOWw3aGZoaGlqeC8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) or delicate, pull-apart milk rolls baking with a simple sniff from my bedroom window, but we’re not quite there yet. Occasionally, I think about streets in other neighborhoods for which I want to create smell maps. My apartment building has its own, ever-changing smell map, too. Right now, the first floor corridor by the mailboxes smells like pine needles (the byproduct of an early morning mopping). Someone on the fourth floor ordered a pizza lunch and lit [a joint](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMveGM5YTI1dTl0dy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) which is wafting — lemony, earthy and a little skunky — out the courtyard-facing window. Meanwhile, my apartment kitchen currently smells like percolating coffee, underpinned by notes of chocolate and gingerbread. Has paying more attention to smell made me a better cook? I certainly think it’s made me more a appreciative one, especially coming out of winter, a season where my senses inevitably feel a little deadened after marching through a procession of gray, sunless days. It’s meditative, that moment I slow down and connect what I smell to what taste, and what I taste to what I remember. And in that moment, I’m made aware yet again of the ways in which our senses connect are a complex, wondrous labyrinth, one that’s worth continuing to explore. ***  It’s officially spring! To celebrate, I’m pulling out some of my favorite spring recipes from the archives to feature in this issue of “The Bite,” Salon Food’s weekly newsletter. — Ashlie Stevens, deputy food editor Dispatches from Salon Food's archives - [This one-pot chickpea pasta has the most craveable "creamy" sauce](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcG96bHluejU0bS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) - [A 5-ingredient formula for the perfectly creamy spring pea soup](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvNmh2bGpvMjlvYy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) - [A next-level grilled cheese, thanks to halloumi and mint you grew yourself](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbGs0dml2M2kyYS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) - [Rhubarb: How to use this harbinger of spring in every type of dish, from tomato sauce to sandwiches](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvdm01Njdkamozcy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) - [This 5-ingredient marinade for sheet pan fish tastes like spring on a plate](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvemM1czUyYmNjcS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) If you found yourself here without subscribing, make sure to sign up for [The Bite](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvZ3o2eHBsM2h5bi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) so you don't miss anything! What to make for dinner this weekend Thanks to an unfortunate food poisoning incident (involving me and an iffy jar of tahini), I’m craving toast and not much else these days. What I’m thinking sounds delicious — and what you may appreciate as an easy weekend supper — is a thick slab of toasted sourdough, spread with ricotta, lemon and zest and [this sweet shallot jam](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvM2V6ZmJuYzkzYi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). Emma Laperruque [writes](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMva2l4dnR2enR6YS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~), “Sure, jam is best known as a way to stretch summer's bounty, to make fragile berries that would've gone moldy in days last for weeks or months. But just as jam need not be limited to fruits — hi bacon, hello red peppers — it need not be limited to warm weather either.” Sounds like the perfect condiment to herald in spring. From our writers - [Cozy ricotta gnudi is a restaurant-worthy dish that only looks complicated](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcXF5emFmY3kyNy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Mary Elizabeth Williams) - [A brief history of brunch, America’s most indulgent yet over-praised weekend meal](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcnN1ZnNhb3I1eS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Joy Saha) - ["Top Chef: World All Stars" goes on a pub crawl and elevates the best of London's classic dishes](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvdmZnazN1MnpzZy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Michael La Corte) - [Want a better fruit salad? Soak it in orange liqueur](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvaWhlOTJ5enhsMS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Bibi Hutchings) - [The top 10 breakfast cereals ranked, according to Reddit](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvb290MGc3b2xueC8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Joy Saha) - [Brunch is overrated: On reclaiming the practical joy of a sensible breakfast](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvM3Z4MW9ra3RjbS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Maggie Hennessy) - [The best cheesesteaks aren't in Philly](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvdjA1M2FjNWl6OS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (D. Watkins) - [Sugar, spice, everything nice: The ultimate guide to seasoning your bacon](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMveGtmcmJxYndmaS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Michael La Corte) - [An ode to crispy food: How I became an air fryer convert and a leftovers guy](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RmaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvaTNxdHRsNzZ3cy8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yJmxoX2VtPXRyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1JTQwZ21haWwuY29tVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Michael La Corte) What we're reading - [How Cookie Jars Capture American Kitsch](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcWdobTJzejdzOS8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) (Eater) - [Kenji López-Alt Spent 5 Months Studying Chicago Thin-Crust Pizza. Here’s What He Learned](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0RCaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvb2hrcmZvOWY0Mi8_bGhfYWlkPTM0NTA5JmxoX2NpZD0xOXYwOXM1Z24yVwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~). (The New York Times) [Unsubscribe from this list](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0Q8aHR0cHM6Ly9yZWFkLmxldHRlcmhlYWQuZW1haWwvdGhlLWJpdGUvdW5zdWJzY3JpYmU_aWQ9QDM0NTA5VwNzcGNCCmQK3uIeZAlO8G5SG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg1QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAJQ~~) Copyright © 2023 The Bite, All rights reserved. 1000 N. West Street, Suite 1200, Wilmington, DE 19801 [Made with Letterhead [Letterhead logo]](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmAWfZP0QiaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbmVwbm83czh5c1cDc3BjQgpkCt7iHmQJTvBuUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW44NUBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAACU~)

Marketing emails from salon.com

View More
Sent On

08/12/2024

Sent On

07/12/2024

Sent On

05/12/2024

Sent On

02/12/2024

Sent On

01/12/2024

Sent On

30/11/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.