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A jammy Zinfandel and dried fruit lend a ton of flavor to lamb-shoulder chops.
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Slow cooker bone broth tastes delicious and can also help with joint pain and inflammation.
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Mint, sugar, and champagne: for playas only!
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Enjoy these pickled eggs with a rosy complexion courtesy of beet juice.
cooking.nytimes.com
Grated fresh pineapple and sparkling wine are the main ingredients in this cold, refreshing soup A garnish of toasted coconut continues the tropical theme It’s vacation as dessert.
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An authentic rendition of a sublime Asian dish. Chicken first steeps in soy, lemon, ginger and rice wine marinade, then is stir-fried with mushrooms and green pepper in sesame oil. Toasted sesame seeds add the final touch.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe came to The Times in a 2007 article by Marian Burros about the then newly burgeoning locavore scene This dish, adapted from Melissa Kelly, the chef at Primo Restaurant in Rockland, Me., makes the most of spring onions and green garlic, two verdant savories that are abundant before summer.
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Get Rollsrice (California Roll in a Wonton Cone) Recipe from Food Network
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Cold coffee mixed with milk, half-and-half, and chocolate liqueur. Serve over ice.
cooking.nytimes.com
Tartine au sucre is an exquisitely simple rustic Québécois dessert consisting of thick slices of white bread topped with maple sugar and heavy cream.
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French lace cookies made with finely chopped almonds, candied orange peel, and chocolate.
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Pickled ginger is called gari or amazu shoga in Japanese. It's served with sushi or sashimi and eaten between different kinds of sushi. It helps to clean your taste buds and enhance the flavors. It's also great with Century Eggs - a Chinese delicacy. You can find prepared pickled ginger in pink or white at most Asian markets but I preferred to make my own and share with family and friends.
Ingredients: ginger, salt, rice vinegar, sugar