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This recipe is by Molly O'Neill and takes About 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
Ingredients: milk, vanilla bean, egg yolks, sugar
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Shrimp, broccoli, and water chestnuts are stir-fried with a combination of soy and oyster sauces in this quick Chinese-style dish.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Florence Fabricant and takes 15 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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This dessert stands on its own, but a scoop of vanilla ice cream certainly wouldn't hurt.
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These Vietnamese spring rolls are the perfect recipe for beating the heat. Poached shrimp, rice noodles, herbs, and lettuce are rolled into a thin rice wrapper. Serve with the sweet and sour dipping sauce.
cooking.nytimes.com
This is one of the signature dishes at Rao’s, the East Harlem red-sauce joint that is best-known for a loyal, boldface-name clientele that makes it difficult to get a table The restaurant now has satellites in Las Vegas and Los Angeles.
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Serve your guests opulent layers of cream cheese, sour cream and mayonnaise mixed with olives, onions, green peppers and parlsey, tender morsels of chicken and an enriched cream of mushroom soup sauce. Top with bread crumbs and bake.
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Roasting the garlic mellows the flavor, so do use the whole head in this garlic-Parmesan sauce. Serve on a bed of pasta or rice for a special presentation.
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Use a ready-made Alfredo sauce to layer with spinach, egg and ricotta, carrots and mushrooms, mozzarella cheese and uncooked lasagna noodles for a creamy, dreamy baked delight.
cooking.nytimes.com
With its rich flesh, salmon is so strongly flavored that you can pair it with just about anything Here I cook it with a yogurt sauce that contains just chopped cucumber and spices If you use farmed salmon and a nonstick skillet, you won't even need to add any fat
cooking.nytimes.com
In the Burgundy region of France, home of Dijon, pork chops are traditionally served in a sauce made with mustard, cream and white wine, and there are very few pairings that are better Richard Olney, a prominent food writer and authority on French cooking, sautéed sliced apples and chops and then baked them all together with cream and mustard dribbled on top I prefer the method here, but you could always fry up some apples and serve them on the side