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A standing beef rib roast rubbed with seasonings is roasted to perfection and served with onions and potatoes roasted in the pan drippings.
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Get Butternut Squash Risotto Recipe from Food Network
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This recipe is inspired by my first CSA share of the summer season, fresh vegetables in a light dressing.
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A homemade toasted guajillo chile paste seasoned with cumin, clove, and oregano flavors this delicious shredded beef. Serve on tortillas with salsa, rice, and beans.
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A great mild dip made with poblano peppers that are charred on the grill and mixed with Monterey Jack cheese, cream cheese, and spices.
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Chef John's versatile farro cakes use a little egg and grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese to help hold them together. How you serve them is up to you, but the possibilities are endless.
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Yukon Gold potatoes are mashed and then baked with butter, milk, cream cheese, egg, and onion.
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Beef brisket is marinated overnight in liquid smoke, Worcestershire, garlic salt and celery seed and slowly cooked for a tender, tangy meal.
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This wonderful picked egg recipe is quick and easy. Perfect for a nice gift, or just to have on hand for entertaining. Plan ahead though, they need to be refrigerated for at least 3 days before they're ready for eating.
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A classic roast turkey recipe with rich herb gravy.
cooking.nytimes.com
When the chef Tony Maws’s grandparents died, he decided to start having Passover Seder at his restaurant, Craigie on Main in Cambridge, Mass This short rib recipe, brought to The Times in 2011, was among the dishes he served, both to his family (on the first night) and his diners (on the second and third nights) It’s a Sephardic take on his grandmother’s tsimmes and brisket, prepared a day in advance and refrigerated to let the flavors meld and the fat float to the top to be skimmed
cooking.nytimes.com
When you get your hands on ice-cold oysters straight from the Chesapeake Bay, it would be foolish to do anything beyond shuck and slurp But in the 19th century, oysters were so plentiful in eastern Virginia and Maryland that they burrowed their way into the region's cooking traditions Most were smoked and salted, roasted over fire, dropped into chowders and stews and used in stuffings