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"Personally, I'm not a stuffing person," says Chef Aaron Sanchez. "I prefer to have my stuffing be loaded with tons of flavor from other ingredients than the bread."
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A recipe for cherry hot sauce made with fiery habaneros, tart cherry juice, sweet carrots, and roasted red peppers.
www.allrecipes.com
Spicy and nutty bars with a rich fig flavor. These make a heartwarming snack food.
www.simplyrecipes.com
Easy microwave jam! Ready in under 20 minutes. Strawberry jam, peach jam, blueberry jam, or any other fruit jam you like.
Ingredients: jam, fruit, sugar, lemon juice
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Get Perfectly Flaky Pie Crust Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: flour, sugar, salt, butter, shortening, water
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In this easy appetizer, much of the flavor comes from the meatballs rather than the accompanying piquant sauce -they 're enriched with real cream and savory onion-soup mix.
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A definite different twist on an old classic. This prime rib will really spice things up! Use the pan drippings for au-jus or make some delicious Yorkshire Pudding. Whip up a batch of fresh horseradish sauce and serve this prime rib with garlic asparagus or a fluffy baked potato. Please note the total time includes 1 hour for marinating.
cooking.nytimes.com
This moist loaf, made with olive oil and yogurt, is less sweet and more complexly flavored than most zucchini breads Grated lemon zest gives a gentle brightness, while brown sugar adds a caramel sweetness, and cinnamon makes it spicy and rich Serve slices plain or buttered, or spread thickly with cream cheese for a more tangy and luscious variation.
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Feel like a kid again with this gummy candy recipe. Fun to make with the kids or just for yourself. If you don't have candy molds, pour the mixture onto a pizza pan and after it cools in the freezer use a cookie cutter to make fun shapes.
Ingredients: sugar, gelatin, water
cooking.nytimes.com
Chocolate-rum mousse, which ran in The Times in 1966, was a remarkably efficient recipe in two distinct ways First, it invoked nearly every food trend of its moment: chocolate desserts were an exotic new fix; any respectable grown-up dessert contained rum; mousse suggested that you understood French cooking, or at least pretended to; two cups of cream was de rigueur; and the recipe assumed you owned one of the kitchen’s latest appliances, the home blender Second, the newfangled blender actually did make the recipe a wonder of efficiency: all you had to do was layer the ingredients and blend, and a dinner-party mousse was yours.
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These are a sweet twist on the usual roasted salty pumpkin seeds, using brown sugar, white sugar, cinnamon and margarine.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Dana Bowen and takes 1 hour. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.