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After I tasted Compost Cookies in New York last winter, I wanted to recreate them at home. Thing is, the only recipes floating around are versions of the recipe...
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There are quite a few posts asking for suggestions recently, so I thought I would post this complete meal rec. For those of you who don't like long ingredient...
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Molly O'Neill and takes 30 minutes, plus refrigeration. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
www.allrecipes.com
Seasoned pork cutlet slices, naruto, and a hard-boiled egg top ramen cooked with shoyu and miso in this authentic Japanese noodle bowl.
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A pot pie made with refrigerated crescent roll crust has the flavors of a reuben sandwich. It's a great way to use up extra corned beef.
cooking.nytimes.com
A coq au vin is a classic French stew in which chicken is braised slowly in red wine and a little brandy to yield a supremely rich sauce filled with tender meat, crisp bits of bacon, mushrooms and burnished pearl onions Traditional recipes call for a whole cut-up chicken, but using all dark meat gives you a particularly succulent dish without the risk of overcooked white meat However, if you would rather substitute a whole cut-up bird, just add the breasts in the last 30 minutes of simmering
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Like a tamale, filled with cheese and fresh sweet corn.
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Vanilla sponge cake gets a drenching in a sweet combination of three kinds of milk and then frosted with cream cheese icing in a Mexican-inspired recipe.
www.simplyrecipes.com
Delicious chocolate bundt cake infused with bourbon whiskey.
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This is a pureed soup with onions, potatoes and zucchini cooked in chicken broth, seasoned with thyme, rosemary and basil. Thicken with potato flakes and served garnished with fresh dill weed.
cooking.nytimes.com
Here is a fairly basic recipe for stew, a low-and-slow variety that calls for simmering lamb (though you could use beef) with barley and root vegetables, then adding some kale at the end so that it doesn’t entirely collapse It’s a simple equation that takes in whatever ingredients you have on hand Start with meat, sturdy root vegetables (potatoes, sweet potatoes, turnips, rutabaga, parsnip, carrots) and grains (barley, wheat berries, farro), add water and simmer away
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Get Spicy Pork with Guajillo Salsa (Puerco Enchilado) Recipe from Food Network