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Miss the tarheel tradition of a pig pickin'? Then find yourself a crock pot, a big pork shoulder, some cider vinegar and get cooking! While ground and crushed red pepper will provide the basic heat - go the extra mile and find some Texas Pete (or Trappey's) pepper sauce to bring the taste of Carolina to your kitchen.
www.allrecipes.com
A microwavable form of the Japanese dessert made with sweet rice flour. More varied and interesting flavors are available as well.
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These easy refrigerator dill pickles are perfectly seasoned, crisp, and delicious.
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Brown sugar, molasses, mustard, and gold rum combine to create this delicious, sweet-and-spicy ham glaze.
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A Russian potato salad with the difference of adding beets and carrots! Use balsamic vinegar instead of champagne vinegar for a different version.
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Caramelizing is a delicious treatment for the often maligned Brussels sprout. The onion and vinegar add bite, while the pistachios add crunch.
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This is the best I've made. It tastes like the ones I have tried at Chinese restaurants.
cooking.nytimes.com
Doubling down on sweet potatoes’ sweetness by adding honey is like adding fuel to the fire, but the nuttiness from the browned butter, heat from the crushed red pepper flakes and bright acidity from the vinegar all work together to bring it back from the brink This hot honey browned butter is also good on roasted winter squash, over plain oatmeal and — if we are being honest —probably over ice cream But that’s a different conversation
www.simplyrecipes.com
Oven-Baked Buffalo Wings! Here's an easier and less messy way to make Buffalo Wings. Marinate your wings in a spicy sauce, broil them briefly, then serve with a tangy blue cheese sauce.
www.chowhound.com
A light, crispy salad with a combination of sweet, sour and spicy to welcome the warm weather. It has shrimp, cucumbers, bell peppers, shallots, chili peppers...
cooking.nytimes.com
These small tarts, inspired by a mojito, are the perfect celebratory end to a meal: refreshing, light and boozy If you don’t have a spice grinder, finely chop the mint for the final step of the curd and then crush it in a pestle and mortar with the rum before adding to the curd The aim is for the mixture to be as fine as possible, almost like a paste or like pesto, so that it’s fine enough to turn the curd slightly greener, rather than just fleck it with mint