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Every Irish household has their own version of this famous dish-so here's mine. I like to add chunky pieces of parsnip for a little sweetness, and fresh rosemary gives it a distinct flavour and aroma. If you use a tougher cut of meat, you can leave it to simmer longer before adding the potatoes. Fantastic on a cold, blustery day-served with a pint of the black stuff, of course!
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This simple, citrusy chicken dinner is a real winner.
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Chef Daniel Patterson conceived of this unconventional method for making eggs: He beats the eggs, cooks them quickly in a vortex of boiling water, then immediately drains them. The result is super-creamy, perfectly scrambled eggs.
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Get Mash Medley Recipe from Food Network
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This dish came to The Times in a 2003 article about Jamie Oliver: "What I found quite interesting with this dish, being English," Mr Oliver said, "is that when you eat this, it's quite delicately flavored It's perfumed with the wine and the rosemary
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We LOVE this pork loin roast stuffed with chopped apples, walnuts and cranberries. So festive, perfect for holiday entertaining!
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Roasted potatoes and onions are a quick and easy alternative to mashed potatoes or fries as a side dish for your weeknight meals.
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Chicken and dumplings are so easy with this slow cooker recipe that calls for condensed soup and refrigerated biscuit dough.
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Seal in flavor and juices with this novel way of cooking roast beef. Wrapped in a salt batter, the beef's moisture and natural juices are sealed in keeping the meat extra tender and delicious. Make au jus separately since the roast's drippings will be too salty to use.
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A mellow stuffing that pairs up perfectly with the Maple Roast Turkey and Gravy.
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Get Grilled Wagyu Beef with Quick Creamed Spinach Recipe from Food Network
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Instead of letting the age-old combination of salt and time tame the bitterness of lemon pith, heat and sugar speed the process along here, pickling the citrus in minutes Just blanch a thinly sliced lemon to remove some of its bite, then simmer it again in a pot of heavily sugared and salted water You’ll end up with lemon slivers that are at once salty, sweet, sour and bitter — and far more interesting than they should be given the amount of work that went into them