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A simple olive oil and balsamic vinegar bread dip, made with garlic and fresh rosemary, takes a nice fresh slice of rustic bread to the next level.
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Skip the restaurant. Make this version of pad thai in your kitchen.
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A tradition in the historic Louisiana town made famous in 'Steel Magnolias,' these deep-fried pastries filled with a zesty ground beef and pork mixture are made easy by using prepared pie crust.
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Spaghetti noodles are tossed with peanut butter, tamari, and Thai chili sauce for this quick, Asian-inspired meal for one.
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Courtesy of The Malaysian Kitchen cookbook, these plump prawns swimming in a creamy, complex sauce of chili, tomato, garlic, ginger, and curry leaves, demand...
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These milk chocolate chip and oat cookies made with coconut oil instead of butter are a quick and easy afternoon snack or lunchbox treat.
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Made with the usual suspects, such as flour, sugar, and yeast, these soft, crowd-pleasing dinner rolls use coconut oil instead of butter.
cooking.nytimes.com
There may never be a better book title than “Aristocrat in Burlap,” a dramatic biography of the Idaho potato, from the first seedlings cultivated by Presbyterian missionaries in the 1840s (with considerable help from Native Americans) to the brown-skinned Burbanks that built today’s $2.7 billion industry The large size of Idaho potatoes — often 3 to 4 pounds each in the 19th century, nourished by volcanic soil and Snake River water — is the source of the mystique The Hasselback potato, named for the hotel in Stockholm where the recipe was invented in the 1950s, shows off the sheer mass of the Idaho potato like nothing else
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Sunny Anderson makes these espresso coffee cakes in mini-loaf pans and tops them with a peanut butter frosting.
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Get Corn Dogs Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
The narrow spectrum of highly sweetened morning food is limiting and ultimately boring This coconut oat pilaf, which most folks might think of as an evening dish, is spicy and aromatic And it will change the way you think about oatmeal.
cooking.nytimes.com
Brining chicken breasts in a soy sauce and fish sauce marinade flecked with lime adds flavor and helps retain moisture while they are on the grill Chicken breasts do particularly well when pounded into an even thickness and cooked quickly over a hot fire, which chars the exterior but keeps them juicy inside But if you or anyone in your clan would prefer dark meat to white, this recipe will also work with boneless, skinless thighs, though you might have to add a minute or so to the cooking time