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Chicken breasts are browned in butter, then baked with mushrooms, onion, white wine, and Gruyere cheese.
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Poppy seeds add crunch and richness to these bite-size tea cake cookies that are rolled in powdered sugar.
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It's a nice combination of andean bolivian/peru traditional ingredients (quinoa) and European cousinne.
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This rib roast recipe took years to formulate and it makes the most out of this cut of meat. It's perfect for any special occasion.
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Served hot or warm, this exotic dip is a huge party pleaser. Ground chicken is simmered in a peanutty coconut sauce. You'll feel guilty for all the praise, because it is so easy to make. Serve with papadums or prawn crackers.
cooking.nytimes.com
It is the national dish of the Philippines, and the subject of intense and delicious debate across its 7,100 islands whether made with chicken, pork or fish Whichever, the protein is braised in vinegar until pungent and rich, sweet and sour and salty at once, then sometimes crisped at the edges in high heat, and always served with the remaining sauce Its excellence derives from the balance of its flavors, in the alchemy of the process
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Raisins, coconut, applesauce, cinnamon, and cooked jasmine rice make creamy, elegant mini pies.
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Cracked wheat berries give nutty taste and texture to this honey wheat bread made with lard.
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A Lebanese dessert that is not overly sweet. It is pleasing to the American palate due to its lack of rose water and orange blossom essence, found in most Middle Eastern desserts. Sahteyn! (Bon appetit!)
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Glutinous white rice, also known as sticky rice or sweet rice, cooked with coconut milk and then baked with a coconut topping, is the Filipino dessert known as biko.
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This creamy, low carb, vegan ice cream has coconut milk, coffee, and cocoa powder and is highly customizable for the whole family to enjoy.
cooking.nytimes.com
In this recipe, herbs are the focus, but to use herbs on a grand scale, it helps to know which ones work in that role and which ones don’t Parsley, obviously, works in abundance: it’s clean-tasting, pleasantly grassy and almost never overwhelming You can add literally a bunch (bunches!) of it to salad, soup, eggs, pasta, grains or beans