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A clam chowder recipe can be intimidating and mysterious so most people don't attempt to make it and only order it out at dinner. We’ve made it easy!
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Michael Zee lends us his recipe for Matcha Hong Kong Egg Waffles.
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These lightly sweetened, gluten free carrot muffins are made with high fiber coconut flour. They make a great addition to any brunch menu, though especially one...
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This easy cornbread recipe uses coconut oil to deliver a slightly sweet and fully delicious take on the quick-bread classic.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is a flatbread that’s somewhere between a Middle Eastern-style pita and an Indian naan Like most leavened breads, this one consists primarily of flour, water and yeast And, like any leavened bread, it requires some rising, though no more than an hour.
Ingredients: salt, sugar, instant yeast, flour, za atar
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Get Jamaican Beef Patties Recipe from Food Network
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Plump little Chinese peanut cookies have that melt-in-your-mouth quality.
cooking.nytimes.com
This is an under-the-radar basic from Julia Child’s “Mastering the Art of French Cooking,” featured in a New York Times article about readers’ favorite Child recipes It is a tomato sauce with onions, garlic and basil, raised high with a perfumed whiff of orange peel and coriander seed Make it when the farmers’ market is overflowing with good tomatoes, freeze it in plastic bags, and use it until there is no more
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Get Shrimp Fritters with Cornichon Dressing Recipe from Food Network
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This recipe for soft sandwich rolls made with pumpkin are decorated using homemade stencils, making them a fun addition to your holiday cooking with the kids.
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Use this recipe to make both sweet and savory pastries.
Ingredients: flour, cake flour, salt, butter, water
cooking.nytimes.com
A classic British bakewell tart is a threesome: a crust; a layer of raspberry jam – one chockfull of seeds; and a sponge cake redolent of almonds. Sliced almonds and a drizzle of icing may or may not be optional, depending on whose recipe you’re using.  I got my first taste of a bakewell, and this recipe, in Paris from my friend, Stephanie Johnston, who got it from her mom, Granny Annie, in England. Granny never used almonds or icing but occasionally swapped her homemade raspberry jam for red currant jelly or lemon curd. When I asked what made a good bakewell, Steph instructed, “The crust, the jam and the almond cake.” Well, of course. That settled, Stephanie confessed to using Bonne Maman jam from the supermarket As for the crust, both Steph and her mom make a plain, all-butter crust, think pâte brisée or pie dough. We polished off Steph’s tart in one go after dinner, but had we shown more discipline, it would have kept at room temperature for three more days.