Search Results (21,738 found)
www.delish.com
A hint of apricot jam plays up nutty Manchego cheese and ham in this grown-up grilled cheese sandwich.
www.allrecipes.com
Easy appetizer of garlic seasoned tomatoes on sliced baguette.
www.allrecipes.com
Flank steak is marinated in a port, citrus, and honey marinade before being grilled to perfection.
www.chowhound.com
An easy mix of blanched vegetables and a simple chive vinaigrette.
www.allrecipes.com
A creamy green bean casserole with bacon and toasted almonds is topped with a crispy crust in this crowd-pleasing Thanksgiving side dish.
www.delish.com
"If I don't have good food at hand, I always eat the wrong thing," Quinn Hatfield says. That's why he keeps grilled meats in his fridge for sandwiches."
www.chowhound.com
This is my favorite Summer salad. It is fresh, raw, simple, quick, easy, nutritious, satisfying, refreshing and absolutely delicious! This simple slaw is a good...
www.simplyrecipes.com
Delicious crab salad! with hazelnuts and chopped pear, served on a bed of butter lettuce.
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
www.chowhound.com
Marjoram, zucchini, and Manchego cheese pack this frittata with flavor.
cooking.nytimes.com
These are based on Suzanne Goin’s turmeric-spiced root vegetables from her wonderful new book “The A.O.C Cookbook.” I use her technique for roasting the carrots, and use the same spices she uses, but I make the dish with a little less olive oil and butter to cut down on calories Suzanne serves her mix of carrots, turnips, parsnips and rutabagas with Greek yogurt seasoned with kaffir lime juice and zest, and mint chutney
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe came to The Times in 1994 via Paola di Mauro, an Italian grandmother who lived, cooked and made wine in Marina, a small suburban town some 12 miles southeast of Rome She was one of a band of cooks, mostly women, stretching back over generations, who have formed Italian cuisine, maintained its traditions and made it one of the world's most beloved and sought-after cooking styles Italians sometimes call it "cucina casalinga," roughly translated as "housewives' cooking." But with its intense concern for the quality of primary ingredients and its care to combine them in a judicious balance of flavors, it is much more than that