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This variation on a traditional French frisée salad recipe is made with pancetta, a big crouton, and a poached egg.
This variation on a traditional French frisée salad recipe is made with pancetta, a big crouton, and a poached egg.
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Get Creamy Kale and Eggs Recipe from Food Network
Get Creamy Kale and Eggs Recipe from Food Network
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Get Chocolate Ricotta Toast Recipe from Food Network
Get Chocolate Ricotta Toast Recipe from Food Network
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Peanut butter lovers won't be able to stay away.
Peanut butter lovers won't be able to stay away.
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Get Cherry Tomatoes with Buttermilk Blue Cheese Dressing Recipe from Food Network
Get Cherry Tomatoes with Buttermilk Blue Cheese Dressing Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Mark Bittman and takes 45 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
This recipe is by Mark Bittman and takes 45 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Get Escarole Salad with Bacon, Caramelized Onions and Blue Cheese Vinaigrette Recipe from Food Network
Get Escarole Salad with Bacon, Caramelized Onions and Blue Cheese Vinaigrette Recipe from Food Network
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Potato crab cakes with onion and green pepper, dipped in egg and rolled in cornflake crumbs, then fried until golden brown.
Potato crab cakes with onion and green pepper, dipped in egg and rolled in cornflake crumbs, then fried until golden brown.
cooking.nytimes.com
Though onion-powder dip does give me a teenage memory buzz, I remember equally well the time I first slow-cooked a batch of onions, watching them easily turn from white to pale yellow to walnut (at which point you have to start minding them with care) These caramelized babies form the basis of scores of top-notch dishes, from onion soup to real Indian stews and sauces, but nowhere are they better used than as the basis for a dip: stir them, along with some lemon juice and thyme leaves, into yogurt or sour cream, and you’re on your way to dip nirvana And just as your mother — or at least mine — made onion-sour-cream dip better with (French’s) canned fried onions, you can also take that idea back a hundred years and improve it: fry some leeks or shallots until they’re crisp
Though onion-powder dip does give me a teenage memory buzz, I remember equally well the time I first slow-cooked a batch of onions, watching them easily turn from white to pale yellow to walnut (at which point you have to start minding them with care) These caramelized babies form the basis of scores of top-notch dishes, from onion soup to real Indian stews and sauces, but nowhere are they better used than as the basis for a dip: stir them, along with some lemon juice and thyme leaves, into yogurt or sour cream, and you’re on your way to dip nirvana And just as your mother — or at least mine — made onion-sour-cream dip better with (French’s) canned fried onions, you can also take that idea back a hundred years and improve it: fry some leeks or shallots until they’re crisp
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Recipe By: Marcia Kiesel
Recipe By: Marcia Kiesel
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Get 20-Minute Crispy Pierogies with Broccoli and Sausage Recipe from Food Network
Get 20-Minute Crispy Pierogies with Broccoli and Sausage Recipe from Food Network
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To make this simple side dish, chef Michael White simmers garlic in milk, which mellows its flavor. Then he purees the garlic and, just before serving, adds it to the sautéed chard.
To make this simple side dish, chef Michael White simmers garlic in milk, which mellows its flavor. Then he purees the garlic and, just before serving, adds it to the sautéed chard.