Search Results (23,112 found)
www.chowhound.com
An easy baked chicken breast recipe with a quick pan sauce made from chicken broth, white wine, whole-grain mustard, flour, and butter.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Chicken Fried Steak with Gravy Recipe from Food Network
www.delish.com
Instead of just steaming or boiling green beans, Katie Workman first sautés them in butter and garlic, then simmers them in chicken broth.
www.delish.com
These tiny fruitcakes will bring joy to everyone on your list. For gifts, bake the cakes in decorative paper liners from supermarkets or baking stores, wrap in parchment, and tie with ribbon or twine.
www.delish.com
Show the fancy restaurant dish who's boss.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get German Apple Strudel Recipe from Food Network
www.delish.com
Proof that bacon and brussels belong together.
cooking.nytimes.com
A classic of his Mississippi childhood, Craig Claiborne's smothered chicken made its debut in The Times in 1983, accompanied by mushrooms and small onions that give it a slightly more metropolitan flavor (You could always omit these if you have neither on hand.) The basic idea is to split a chicken down the back and cook it whole in a skillet over butter, with a weighted plate on top to insure a crisp skin, and rich gravy In terms of temperature and time, the Southern gospel of low and slow is key to achieving maximum smother.
www.allrecipes.com
Make this white chicken chili with creamy cannellini beans, fresh zucchini, and zesty chilies--ready to serve in 30 minutes.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Black Sea Bass and Mussels a la Nage Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
The writer Laurie Colwin had an obsession with gingerbread, publishing a few different essays and recipes exploring its charms In the essay that precedes this moist, cakelike rendition, from her book “Home Cooking,” she writes that it is “home food” — not fancy restaurant food, that is, but soothing cold-weather food that is simple to make, ideal for an afternoon spent holed up indoors The essay is also a paean to Steen’s cane syrup, from Louisiana, which comes in cheerful yellow cans