Basically what @Jabril@hexbear.net told you is right: just make it without chili. This is often called white kimchi, if you want the term to throw into search engines to find some recipes.
Kimchi is the other side of the coin from sauerkraut. I love them both. There's thought that sauerkraut was actually an evolution of kimchi when the latter was brought to Europe by the Mongolian army.
It's cool how we basically made everyone's lives worse for about ten months and then tried to undo it. Same with all the tariffs suddenly cut when they realized that it was increasing grocery prices.
I ran a years long Shadowrun campaign and in between sessions, I'd post news stories, forum conversations and other little scenes the players would have access to that showed how the greater world was taking in their actions. I'd use it to slip in foreshadowing or clues on perhaps people they should hit up for information, stuff like that. Highly recommend this not only as something fun for the players, but also good creative writing exercises to take on different modes of writing.
D&D is always a safe bet because it's by far the most normie and famous. With newbies, it's tough to go wrong because they kind of "get" what's supposed to happen with it.
But if you do want to branch out, one system I like is Monster of the Week, which has a sort of base ruleset that have been then put into a variety of settings. The base Monster of the Week is modeled a bit after Buffy the Vampire and various urban fantasy works that have followed, you don't really have a class so much so as a character archetype. There's a Slayer, like Buffy, but there's also a Meddling Kid, like Scooby-Doo, and a bunch of other things like that. Part of character creation is to go around the table and decide how everyone knows each other and that's based on the character's archetype.
The actual mechanics are pretty straightforward. You basically have like half a dozen things you can do on your turn called "Basic Moves" and then some archetypes get a few more. So, your players can have a cheat sheet in front of them of what they can "do" and it helps keep things streamlined. The dice is just 2d6, so might be less intimidating than having to figure out the odds on a d20 versus a d4 kind of thing.
And the Monster of the Week setting specifically is pretty light hearted. So you don't have to worry about asking for some ultra-serious engagement from some people just getting their feet wet. One of the main actions is literally called "Kick Some Ass" and that's just how you say I'm going to do a combat action. Everyone can kind of treat it as extreme camp of a CW show or if they want to get a bit more serious, take it all the way to something like Supernatural or whatever.
I think she's more savvy than a lot of her compatriots. She understands that Trump is tanking the MAGA brand and she's been distancing herself from him basically all of this second term. I don't trust her at all even when she actually says something approaching agreeable; she's just using undeniable facts to smuggle in her insane brand of politics. But it's clear she's triangulating for the post Trump era of the party while most of them are just stuck in his gravity.
I've had this album on daily listen status since it dropped. I miss their older, more punk sound a little bit, but they're just so good and I appreciate bands that grow and try new things.
KoA definitely had me for a bit, but eventually it started feeling like what it was: an MMO that was converted into a single player game. But yeah, it's much better than it had any right to be considering its back story of being made by a studio headed by a former baseball player that somehow swindled the state of Rhode Island.
Tecmo Secret of the Stars had dated graphics, an incredibly bad translation, really generic story and a bit of old school grind to boot.
But I really enjoyed that you had two parties that you swapped between, each of them could go through colored gates the other couldn't, and it also had a town building aspect that at the time was not as common in console games especially. I think the fact that I was only able to play this by finding it at a local rental place, no store in my area ever seemed to actually sell it, made it feel more special than it actually was. But I got this one from the rental store multiple times since no nearby stores actually sold it. At least not near Christmas or my birthday, which were the only times my parents would even entertain spending what little money we had on video games.
Yeah, I've enjoyed Persona, I beat 5 twice. But before even seeing this discourse I commented to friends how nice it is to have a good RPG game about adults having adult feelings and having adult problems (for the most part, obviously Maelle is still a teenager). There aren't enough video games in general with that dynamic, but especially turn-based RPGs. So, that alone makes E33 refreshing.
Basically what @Jabril@hexbear.net told you is right: just make it without chili. This is often called white kimchi, if you want the term to throw into search engines to find some recipes.