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cooking.nytimes.com
This grilled and smoked salmon recipe by the food writer Betty Fussell calls for curing the fish for several hours with salt, brown sugar and spices before smoking it over indirect heat on your grill While the fatty fish absorbs the smoke beautifully, the fish can also be successfully cooked in a grill pan, or under the broiler The salt and sugar cure, laced with sweet spices, both flavors the fish and firms up its flesh, giving it a meaty, silky texture
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You can substitute ground beef chuck or ground turkey in this recipe. Vary cooking times accordingly.
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Get Grilled Brussels Sprouts Recipe from Food Network
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Try this traditional bechamel sauce as a delicious base for a variety of dishes from chicken to mac and cheese.
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Poppy seeds add a twist to this fast, easy chicken stir fry.
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Get Barefoot BBQ Hang Ten BBQ Sauce Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Taralli are delicious ring shaped rusk-like Italian snacks from Apulia and Campania Now that I know how easy they are to make I could be in big trouble, as whenever I’ve bought them from one of my favorite Italian delis I have a hard time resisting them It’s the olive oil, I now know, that makes them special and different from other twice-baked breads
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A simple vegetable stir-fry served over fluffy bulgur wheat. Toasted cumin adds subtle tones to this quick, simple meal. Basil and tart kumquats bring the flavors to a bright, exciting finish!
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Luxurious beef bourguignon, or beef Burgundy, with beef chuck, carrots, pearl onions, mushrooms, and coated with a deeply flavored, silky sauce.
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Throw this stew together before leaving for work — and a comforting pot of tender meat will be waiting for you when you get home.
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A marinade of white Zinfandel wine, garlic, and lemon juice gives your mahi mahi fillets a nice flavor before heading to the grill.
cooking.nytimes.com
A very large whole roasted fish brought to the table with head and tail intact is a visually dramatic and incredibly tasty dinner party main course Even better is that it’s both a breeze to cook (season it up, throw it in the oven and wait), and to serve (big fish have big bones, which makes it easy to scoop the flesh off the skeleton) Do not forget to call your fishmonger ahead to order a large fish