Search Results (3,184 found)
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This light and flavorful appetizer is great for seafood and garlic lovers!
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A crusty rosemary bread works nicely for this classic Italian salad. The bread - pulled into bite-sized pieces - tomatoes, cucumbers and red onions, are tossed with fresh herbs and just enough vinegar and oil to give them a nice glistening. Four generous servings.
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This rémoulade recipe mixes the classic French ingredients with Asian soy sauce and Louisiana hot sauce.
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Super satisfying and super easy.
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A cream cheese and mayonnaise base hosts kielbasa sausage, jalapeno pepper, and cheese for a warm appetizer dip perfect for your next football-watching event.
cooking.nytimes.com
To make a sorbet is to perform alchemy, to transform a perfectly ripe, sweet piece of fruit into a distillate of itself These are lofty words for a simple process, which boils down to making a plum purée and a honey-thyme syrup, mixing them together and freezing the whole thing The pinch of ascorbic acid, or vitamin-C powder, is there to prevent browning of the fruit
Ingredients: sugar, thyme, plums, honey
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Ground turkey is combined with thousand island dressing, mozzarella cheese, and sauerkraut for this alternative to the classic Reuben sandwich. Serve with additional thousand island dressing for dipping.
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This originally came from a bed and breakfast style hotel that I stayed in years ago, but I've adapted it to my specs. It's pretty delicious, and you can adapt...
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This anise seed- and hazelnut-studded Christmas bread is made in the bread machine.
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This sandwich is a tasty way to serve Italian sausages. It is a Friday night regular for my family.
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Rump roast is cooked with Italian salad dressing mix and seasonings until it is tender enough to shred with a fork.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe was brought to The Times by Regina Schrambling in a 1989 article about a return to simple Italian food after an almost decade long obsession with culinary excess and exotica (goose prosciutto, anyone?) This version of the classic pasta dish is an adaptation of a one from Giuliano Bugialli, an Italian cookbook author and cooking teacher It is simple to prepare – 45 minutes from start to finish -– but full of bright, sophisticated flavors