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A popular way to drink your martini back in the 1930s. And not a bad way to drink them now, either. Gin, dry vermouth and a couple dashes of orange bitters.
Ingredients: ice, gin, vermouth, orange, garnish
cooking.nytimes.com
This stir-fry has hot (red pepper flakes), sour (vinegar), sweet (honey) and bitter (escarole) elements Escarole goes by a few names, including broad-leafed endive and Batavia endive (In France it is just called Batavia)
cooking.nytimes.com
Here is a rich and peppery stew that hails from the coastal plains of the Carolinas The name derives from the way in which the pieces of chicken sit in the pot, like hummocks in a bog It has since spread across both North and South Carolina, according to Kathleen Purvis, the food editor of The Charlotte Observer in North Carolina
www.allrecipes.com
A vodka martini is sullied with olives and brine from the olive jar. It can be served on the rocks, or strained into a chilled cocktail glass.
Ingredients: vodka, vermouth, brine, green olives
cooking.nytimes.com
The Highlands Bar and Grill in Birmingham, Ala., has evolved with dining trends to a small degree over the years (these days, of course, there is a poached “farm egg” on the menu), but it also bucks them to a larger one The point has been to change carefully and ever so slightly, always and never At no time can the restaurant be perceived as changing at all