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This is considered the Philippine national dish. The combination of soy sauce, vinegar, garlic, ginger and peppercorns is delicious and actually preserves the chicken! Great for picnics. My mother taught me how to cook this, using her variation from the original recipe. A delicious, cheap and easy dish! Serve it hot with hot steamed Jasmine rice.
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My version of chicken stew is influenced by simple local French Canadian home cooking and is a bit like a Cajun Ettouffe. A roux is created after first sweating...
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Alain Coumont makes this creamy (yet cream-free) rice dish with lemony Lucques olives and nutty organic Camargue red rice, but almost any green olive or short-grain brown rice would be terrific.
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Reinvent turkey leftovers with this simple method for making turkey soup. Simmer turkey bones with onion, carrots, celery, and herbs for a tasty broth. Just add chopped leftover turkey meat and the soup is ready!
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It would be hard to find a simpler meal than Mr Claiborne’s hearty beef stew, which goes beautifully with buttered noodles and a stout glass of red wine (Or, for the children, a glass of milk.) A small scattering of cloves adds a floral note to the gravy, augmented by just a little thyme, and the combination pairs beautifully with the carrots you add near the end of the cooking process, to prevent them from going mushy in the heat
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Get Brisket Recipe from Food Network
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Get Kale Pesto Chicken Breasts Recipe from Food Network
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Get Herby Ranch Dressing Recipe from Food Network
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Get Katie Lee's Chicken Pot Pie Recipe from Food Network
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Get Standing Rib Roast Recipe from Food Network
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Red amaranth leaves are tossed with onion, lots of garlic, and a pungent mix of exotic spices in this South Indian side dish of greens.
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Steamed corned beef is a classic Bahamian dish also known as 'Fire Engine'. Traditionally served with grits for breakfast or with white rice for lunch or dinner. Steam is a Bahamian term for anything fried down and simmered in a tomato base (bologna, pork chops or chicken can also be served this way).