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cooking.nytimes.com
This is my simple, everyday take on a dish developed at Momofuku Ssam Bar in Manhattan many years ago by the chefs David Chang and Tien Ho and their band of collaborators It is almost literally a mashup: a meal that is kind of Korean, kind of Chinese, kind of Italian If you don’t like spicy food, use miso instead of the gochujang and don’t use Sichuan peppercorns, which add a numbing, tingly pop to the fire
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Get Fried Catfish Recipe from Food Network
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Get Salmon-Shrimp Spirals Recipe from Food Network
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Blue Moon inspired burger stuffed with bleu cheese and accompanied by Blue Moon beer-battered onion rings! This takes me back to great steakhouse cheeseburgers...
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Although real Chinese dinners usually end with a piece of fruit, Western influence has caused a few changes. This cake uses Chinese techniques to make a French inspired, and extremely moist, sponge cake.
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These protein bars with chocolate, raisins, and cranberries never go into the oven. Just mix the ingredients and refrigerate until firm.
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Chocolate gravy, made from cocoa powder, butter, milk, and vanilla extract, is the kind of dessert children love: creamy, sweet, and rich.
Ingredients: sugar, flour, cocoa, milk, egg, butter, vanilla
cooking.nytimes.com
Layered flavors are the secret behind this chicken salad, from the chef Sara Kramer of Kismet in Los Angeles After grilling the chicken and letting it rest, reserve the chicken juice to whisk into a vinaigrette of olive oil and lemon juice Then add chile crisp, that chile-flake-in-oil condiment some Chinese restaurants have on the table, and augment it with toasted and crushed coriander, fennel seed and cardamom
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Get Steak au Poivre Recipe from Food Network
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These clams are steamed in wine, butter, and spices. When the clams are gone, dip Italian bread in the broth.
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We tried a couple of recipes; this was voted the best! The Gruyere gives a very sweet and nutty flavour to the fondue, the sharp Cheddar makes it tangy, and the Emmentaler blends it all. Cooking the flour first helps the mixture not to be so pasty and powdery.