Search Results (6,185 found)
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Fruit flavored gelatin, soft drink mix, sugar and water are blended, then chilled until...pop! The ice pops are ready.
Ingredients: fruit, soft drink, sugar, water
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Get Grilled Steak Salad with Texas Peaches, Pecans and Limes Recipe from Food Network
www.simplyrecipes.com
Crisp fall salad with sliced endive, walnuts, chopped pear, and blue cheese.
cooking.nytimes.com
Layered flavors are the secret behind this chicken salad, from the chef Sara Kramer of Kismet in Los Angeles After grilling the chicken and letting it rest, reserve the chicken juice to whisk into a vinaigrette of olive oil and lemon juice Then add chile crisp, that chile-flake-in-oil condiment some Chinese restaurants have on the table, and augment it with toasted and crushed coriander, fennel seed and cardamom
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The tangy flavor of fresh grapefruit sections combines perfectly with the mellow tastes of avocado and Swiss cheese in a holiday-worthy green salad served with poppy seed dressing.
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A simple light and sweet salad with goat cheese, dried cherries and walnuts. This dish reminds me of being on the beach.
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This pie downright beautiful when made with white nectarines. Slip the skins off the fruit, slice in half and arrange in an unbaked pie shell. Combine heavy cream, sugar, cinnamon, flour and almond extract, and then pour this lovely concoction over and around the nectarines. Bake in a very hot oven for 40 minutes.
www.delish.com
Grace Parisi grinds granola to use in place of flour, then adds whole pieces of granola to her dough for crunch.
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A healthy grilled vegetable pasta salad recipe.
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This family favorite chicken salad is made with celery, bell pepper, green olives, apple, lettuce, and mayo—plus a secret ingredient that makes all the difference!
cooking.nytimes.com
A bright and tangy salad cuts the heaviness of the typical Thanksgiving meal This one, with fennel, celery, apples and toasted walnuts, is all crunch, which the carb-heavy meal can generally use more of You can make the dressing a day ahead and store it in the fridge, but don't dress the salad until an hour before serving.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe came to The Times in 1990 in Pierre Franey's 60-Minute Gourmet column A lentil salad (we used those tiny French green lentils, but you can use the standard supermarket variety as well) is dressed with a Dijon mustard vinaigrette, then topped with skirt steak that's been seared in a cast-iron pan A simple sauce, made by deglazing the pan with butter, garlic and parsley, is drizzled over the top