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cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Karen Baar and takes 10 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Colorful peppers are stir-fried with chicken. Balsamic vinegar and basil bring plenty of flavor to this exciting dish.
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Get Beans Meanz Fitz Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: bacon, broad beans, water, anchovy
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Red and golden beets, fennel slices, crumbled goat cheese, and avocado slices drizzled with basil vinaigrette make a delicious salad.
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Turn a butternut squash into a healthier version of french fries by coating them with cooking spray and seasoning with parsley, salt, and pepper.
Ingredients: butternut squash, parsley, salt
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Toss this super simple kale, carrot, quinoa, and sunflower seed salad together for a quick and easy lunch full of bright colors and flavors.
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A bed of pasta is served with a colorful saute of steak, bell peppers, mushrooms, tomatoes and onions. Serve as is, or incorporate your favorite red or white sauce.
cooking.nytimes.com
Dongbei cai is the food of Northeast China Weiliang Chen, the chef at Northeast Taste Chinese Food, the biggest of the Dongbei restaurants in Queens, makes an elegant, tender version of a popular Dongbei stir-fry of lamb with dried chilies, made fragrant and crunchy with cumin seeds — a legacy of the nomadic Mongols who long ruled Central Asia, carrying spices on horseback along with their arrows Lamb is considered a Northern taste and excessively “strong” by many Chinese cooks; it is always cooked with powerful aromatics, like chili peppers and garlic, to subdue it.
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This California-style fusion sushi features untraditional but delicious smoked salmon and cream cheese rolled into nori seaweed sheets with sushi rice, then sliced into rounds.
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This classic Chinese Broccoli Beef Stir Fry recipe only 30 minutes from start to finish! Crisp-tender broccoli and tender steak, all decked out in a savory sauce. Serve with rice.
cooking.nytimes.com
This classic recipe appeared in a 1963 Times article by Craig Claiborne about the increasing popularity of beef stroganoff (the article featured not one, but two slightly different recipes for the dish.) Mr Claiborne reported that “the meat-and-cream dish is of Russian provenance, likely named for a noted Russian gourmet, Count Paul Stroganoff, a dignitary in the court of Czar Alexander III.” Stroganoff may not be considered haute cuisine any longer, but the rich stew, dotted with mushrooms and laced with sour cream, is still deeply satisfying and the perfect antidote to a chilly day Serve it over buttered parsley noodles.
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Resist the urge to pile on any of the usual toppings lettuce, tomato, ketchup. "The port is your condiment," explains Umami Burger's Adam Fleischman.