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A savory stew including tomatoes, potatoes, carrots, and garlic. This very flavorful and economical cut of meat requires long, slow cooking.
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Get Original Lauer-Kraut Burgers Recipe from Food Network
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Panade is the French country cook's answer to stuffing — a satisfying and efficient way to use up stale bread. Because there are so few components, taking care to ensure that each one is just right will make all the difference in how the final dish tastes. Start with a stale, crusty loaf of sourdough bread Cook the onions slowly, until they're a deep caramel color, and then season them properly with vinegar and wine Buy good Gruyère and Parmesan, and grate it yourself
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This simple recipes for a black bean, corn, and tomato salsa is finished with zesty Italian salad dressing.
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Everyone loves this chicken pasta salad loaded with crunchy cashews, juicy seedless grapes, and crisp water chestnuts, celery, and green onions. You won't go wrong serving this recipe.
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Delicate rice vinegar dresses this salad of chicken, lettuce, nuts and the requisite sesame seeds and crisp Chinese noodles.
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A warming one-pot meal, this Melissa Clark recipe, recalls the finest of Moroccan tagines It pulls the best from various tagine recipes — cinnamon sticks and green olives, lemon and saffron, and dried apricots Done in two hours, it might not be a dish for a busy weeknight, but a leisurely one, requiring a good amount of comfort.
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Our new favorite dip has a kick!
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I'm Palestinian and my mother would cook this for special guests. A very exotic twist to cooking rabbit with sage, olives, artichokes and served alongside rosemary potatoes.
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A simple, quick recipe for Szechuan-style chicken with basic ingredients. This is usually served over white rice.
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This recipe was submitted by Real Women of PHILADELPHIA Contestant Lenore Nolan-Ryan.
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Soup doesn't have to be loaded with meat to be deeply satisfying This one from Mary McCartney, devoted vegetarian, cookbook author and a daughter of Paul, is proof of that fact Quinoa adds a lovely bit of texture, and beans – practically any variety will do – add heft and a wonderful creaminess as they break down in the broth