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An overhaul of the classic lunchtime recipe, made with premium canned tuna, fennel, and lemon zest.
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Tangy, buttery shrimp that despite the name are not cooked on a barbecue, or with barbecue sauce.
cooking.nytimes.com
Making the dressing for Caesar salad is an exercise in the art of layering salty ingredients to build flavor; there are anchovies, Parmesan and Worcestershire sauce, in addition to the salt itself (There is also garlic, which is pounded with a pinch of salt using a mortar and pestle to make a smooth paste.) Since a delicious balanced dressing depends on working in the right amounts of each of those ingredients — and the other, unsalted elements — refrain from adding the salt crystals until you’ve added the right amount of everything else This recipe is adapted from "Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat" by Samin Nosrat, and it's absolutely worth making the torn croutons — store-bought croutons can’t compete, and you'll have leftovers for another salad.
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Get Sunny's Cheesy Bacon Cornbread Dressing Recipe from Food Network
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Get Loco Moco Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
This classic recipe appeared in a 1963 Times article by Craig Claiborne about the increasing popularity of beef stroganoff (the article featured not one, but two slightly different recipes for the dish.) Mr Claiborne reported that “the meat-and-cream dish is of Russian provenance, likely named for a noted Russian gourmet, Count Paul Stroganoff, a dignitary in the court of Czar Alexander III.” Stroganoff may not be considered haute cuisine any longer, but the rich stew, dotted with mushrooms and laced with sour cream, is still deeply satisfying and the perfect antidote to a chilly day Serve it over buttered parsley noodles.
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Tender long Japanese eggplants quickly grilled, served with sesame tahini sauce.
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Classic restaurant flavors in a recipe that's super-easy to make at home.
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The mother sauce of Border Cuisine.
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I am overrun with wild cilantro in my back yard. Literally, it feeds my compost bin more than my family even though we use it in everything. This sauce (perhaps more of a pesto) is fabulous on anything but the obvious choices are chicken and tuna. Enjoy.
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Tangy, fresh, and herby, this sauce is great served with lamb chops, or as a healthy dip.