Good morning. Who knows where the desire to cook this dish or that one comes from, what triggers a synapse to fire? I watched a brief video clip of a friend dimpling some focaccia the other day, sun-gold olive oil over a pillowy cloud of dough, and suddenly that was all I wanted to make and eat: eggplant focaccia with ricotta and olives, for instance; focaccia with sweet onions and capers; focaccia with crispy mushrooms (above).
I saw a can of hearts of palm in the back of my pantry and, just like that, I wanted to slice it into slaw with cabbage and avocados; wanted to use it to make palmitos aguachile verde, a mock ceviche with nori, chiles and lime; wanted to dice it as a garnish for the tuna sashimi they used to serve at Nobu Downtown.
I took one look at the photograph of this platter of naan-o paneer-o sabzi, an Iranian dish of lavash, feta and herbs and — wham! That had to be dinner, right away.
It’s cool to experience that inspiration, when it happens. Someone says caramelized zucchini and another responds, wow, and caramelized zucchini pasta is born. You catch a whiff of cilantro in the market, something crackles in your brain and there needs to be cilantro rice for dinner, or spinach-and-cilantro soup.
Or someone just tells you: Melissa Clark has a new recipe. Immediately it’s go time for many: almond cake with peaches and cream. Melissa’s recipes always deliver.
And if for some reason none of those recipes appeal? We’ve collected thousands and thousands more prompts for your cooking attention on New York Times Cooking. (You’ll need a subscription to access them, of course. Subscriptions are what make this whole operation possible. If you haven’t taken one out already, I hope you will subscribe today. Thank you.)
You can find even more on our Instagram page and on our YouTube channel, where Eric Kim recently went to teach us all how to cook salmon with crispy skin.
Nota bene: We are standing by to help if anything goes wrong while you’re cooking or using our site and apps. Just write: cookingcare@nytimes.com and someone will get back you.
Now, it’s nothing to do with pork butts or steak tartare and that’s a good thing: Tejal Rao’s newsletter “The Veggie” launches tomorrow, and you ought to sign up. Her ode to the endless pleasures of vegetarian cooking in The Times this week makes the case for why better than I ever could.