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Make these soft pretzels the traditional way by boiling them in water with baking soda for a shiny, golden surface.
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Tender, buttery yeast-raised dinner rolls are worth the time and effort to make.
Ingredients: milk, yeast, sugar, eggs, butter, salt, flour
www.delish.com
While visiting Spain's Navarra region, Alex Raij saw fruit trees growing in a parcel of Garnacha vines. To pay homage to the mixed plot, she plucked apricots and plums and poached them in a rosé made from Garnacha grapes.
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If you love lemon bars, try these delicious lime bars. They're similar, but they have the bite of fresh lime juice and grated lime peel. Fun to take to a picnic or just make anytime.
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This is a rich and lovely braided bread with a scattering of poppy seeds on top.
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Oyster stew is whipped up in a matter of minutes. The fresher the oysters, the better the flavor. A fresh tasty, savory version that's sure to please.
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The best way to prepare delicious grape leaves, or yeb'r't in Arabic, as handed down by my grandmother from Aleppo, Syria as brought to the US in 1912.
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This is a Swedish cardamom bread adorned with candied cherries, citron and golden raisins.
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Loquats make a wonderfully fragrant jam and are worth harvesting. If you have a loquat tree, wait until the loquats are yellow before picking.
Ingredients: loquats, sugar, lemon juice
cooking.nytimes.com
This is a hack of an old recipe from David McMillan and Fred Morin of the restaurant Joe Beef in Montreal, who match sea scallops with pulled pork and hollandaise sauce for a delicious dish For reasons of habit, taste or happenstance, I started making it with duck instead It seems like a lot of work — two species, a fancy sauce — but a lot of the cooking is unattended, and the sauce, you’ll see, is quite easy to pull off, at least the second time you try
www.chowhound.com
A quick stir-fry recipe of tofu and snow peas with a little spice from red pepper flakes.
cooking.nytimes.com
The chicken stew here does have an authentic origin, but I have lightened it a little by dispensing with the cream that would be added luxuriously in its country of origin And you can cheerfully use a dry or semi-dry from anywhere in the world I have nothing against the regular coq au vin, but I might actually prefer this sprightlier version