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cooking.nytimes.com
These sophisticated crepes can be made ahead of time and reheated in a low-temperature oven The sauce, made by simmering raspberries in a rose-scented, cassis-spiked syrup, is what makes them special While most of it is poured over the folded crepes, a bit is added to the yogurt, honey and lime filling, making it just sweet enough.
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Get Roasted Cod with Lima Beans Recipe from Food Network
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Get Red Velvet Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: sparkling wine, framboise
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A combination of fermented soybeans and rice, white miso makes a tasty marinade or salad dressing.
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Not a fan of soba noodles? This super-flavorful shrimp recipe also goes great with angel hair pasta or chow mein noodles.
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Sophie Dahl fondly refers to this dish as Paris Mash because she used to make it in Paris while visiting an artist friend, Annie Morris.
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Wanted to recreate the port wine cheese balls of my childhood and Hickory Farms fame but with quality ingredients and minus that weird color. Found the secret...
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Alexandra Guarnaschelli loves to serve raisin-studded braised fennel with a meaty white fish, like halibut, black bass, or striped bass. Roasting the large fish fillet whole (rather than in portions) is a great way to serve a small crowd.
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Salmon is simply seasoned and baked, then served with a light wine sauce.
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The creamy sauce for this crisp-skinned chicken is full of pungent marjoram.
cooking.nytimes.com
The boneless, skinless chicken breast is as simple to prepare as a burger, nearly as ubiquitous and generally seen as both classier and “healthier.” But in the kitchen, it has two major shortcomings First, its intrinsic flavor is minimal, more akin to pasta than to even an egg (An egg is exciting by comparison.) Second, preparing a burger isn’t that simple: unless you’re looking for well done, you have to get the timing just right
cooking.nytimes.com
Homemade mustard is better than its supermarket counterpart, and it’s stupendously easy to make Here, the combination of yellow and brown seeds makes for a medium-aggressive kick, but you could use all of one variety if you prefer Use cold water to soak the seeds, and after puréeing, taste your mustard