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Warm leeks over smoky bacon cream with crisp hazelnuts.
www.allrecipes.com
A brilliant steak sauce that really brings out the flavor of any type of grilled steak. It's best with eye fillet or Scotch steaks. Raspberry jam is the wildly inventive twist that really makes this sauce unique.
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This is a traditional German beet salad with a simple oil and apple cider vinegar dressing and caraway seeds that can be eaten warm or cold.
www.delish.com
When buying watercress, look for bunches with bright, glossy green leaves that haven't begun to wilt. Store in a plastic bag, in paper towels, up to 5 days.
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Get Grandma Hugelen's Secret Steak Sauce Recipe from Food Network
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This fresh and flavorful salad features buttery yellow corn tossed with chunks of tomato and onion with a fresh basil vinaigrette.
cooking.nytimes.com
This simple, refreshing salad from Alice Waters, the founder and owner of Chez Panisse, the legendary Berkeley restaurant, can be served as a first course or to revive the palate between the main course and dessert It came to The Times in 2010 when the Well blog featured a number of recipes from “The Food Network South Beach Wine & Food Festival Cookbook: Recipes and Behind-the-Scenes Stories from America’s Hottest Chefs."
cooking.nytimes.com
Spicy, brawny and full of ginger and garlic, these pork noodles are a play on dumplings, but easier to make at home If you don’t have the black vinegar to sprinkle on top of the sliced ginger, you can simply leave it out Or try substituting balsamic, which is a bit sweeter, but has similar caramel notes to play off the ginger’s pungency
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Get Sesame Noodle Salad Recipe from Food Network
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A quick, spicy marinade prepares shrimp for the grill in this Chinese-style treatment.
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Get Orange Chicken Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
The easy-to-memorize marinade for this fast broiled salmon hits all the right notes: salty, sweet and sour The fish emerges from the oven with caramelized, crisp skin, which contrasts nicely with a salad of fresh parsley or cilantro (or both), tossed with sesame oil and rice wine vinegar Close contact with the intense heat will help crisp up the skin, while keeping the rest of the fish tender and flaky