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A stock so rich and savory, your soups and gravies will be amazing! It's a little work, but it's cheap and sooo worth it.
cooking.nytimes.com
This is a dish that originated in ‘‘The Escoffier Cookbook’’ as a ‘‘garnish’’ for lamb chops: macaroni and cheese, essentially, for fancy people It serves well as a main dish, though, particularly if you double the recipe Escoffier added both truffles and tongue to the mix, and you can, too, though it is hardly necessary
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Get Stromboli Recipe from Food Network
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Leah Chase, the chef and owner of Dooky Chase in New Orleans, gave an interview to Matt Lee and Ted Lee of The Times back in 2000 It was about her gumbo, which is brackish and silky and delicious, and for which she offered a recipe Ms
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Fresh green beans slow cooked until tender with ham hocks, new potatoes and light seasoning.
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A meaty ham bone brings tons of flavor to these simple pinto beans, simmered until tender in a slow cooker.
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This easy and refreshing starter featuring cantaloupe and cured ham (Parma ham for instance) can also be served as an appetizer: just cut the cantaloupe into bite-size pieces, wrap them with ham and spear them on skewers for a colorful snack! Use superior quality Italian ham for best results.
Ingredients: cantaloupe, prosciutto
www.delish.com
Dry English mustard delivers much more of a burn than yellow ballpark mustard, so even used in a pickling liquid, it can lend some surprising heat.
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Get Porchetta Recipe from Food Network
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Ramen noodles are served cold with chili sauce, cucumber, and carrot slices as well as ham and egg. This is a common cold noodle salad in Japan, and always great to eat when the weather is hot.
www.chowhound.com
Enjoy this Roasted rack of lamb with fresh mint balsamic vinaigrette recipe recipe with ingredients and easy step-by-step directions from Chowhound.
cooking.nytimes.com
This retro indulgence, called Pojarski de veau (veal Pojarski), was supposedly a favorite of Czar Nicholas I It gained popularity in Montreal after the city hosted Expo in 1967 It is made with diced veal, mushrooms and butter, formed into a plump, flat-topped meatball and then stuck with a roasted bone, so that the dish looks like a chop but tastes richer and more tender