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Chef John's quinoa tabbouleh, packed with chopped and blended herbs, offers a fresh, green base for any summer side salad or ancient grain bowl you want to build.
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Melon and cucumber are a marvelous combination, never more so than when ripe tomatoes provide a bridge between the two Parsley, mint and the refreshing bite of Champagne vinegar take the flavors even higher, making this salad both a perfect lunch or a fine start to a summer dinner.
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Cool, fresh, and versatile, this raita can be served as an accompaniment to almost any dish, snack, or meal.
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The lemon mint syrup here enhances the sweetness of fresh berries. It would also be nice to sweeten iced tea.
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Simple and quick to prepare. Sugar snap peas are quickly fried with green onion and garlic, and tossed with fresh mint leaves. Wonderful use for spring garden vegetables. Serve hot or at room temperature.
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This recipe is by Jonathan Miles. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Cocoa powder, agave nectar, and fresh mint come together in this paleo-friendly chocolate mint syrup that is great with ice cream and coffee.
Ingredients: agave syrup, cocoa, mint
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This recipe is by Bryan Miller and takes 45 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Make a clean version of ranch dressing with this quick and easy recipe using Greek yogurt, coconut milk, fresh chives, parsley, and dill.
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Chef John's recipe for grilled lamb steaks uses a yogurt marinade before dressing the cooked steaks in a delicious sherry vinegar-honey vinaigrette.
cooking.nytimes.com
Jonathon Sawyer is no snob Although he runs the kitchens in a slew of acclaimed restaurants in the Cleveland area, including The Greenhouse Tavern, the chef decided to honor Thanksgiving and his home state, Ohio, by sending along a personal recipe that calls to mind the processed-food delights that, for decades, characterized the cooking of the Midwest “Think of this salad as a little slice of nostalgia from the canned-and-frozen households of the mid-20th century,” he wrote in an email
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The 1930s cocktail recipe, courtesy of tiki historian Jeff Berry.