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I love grits, which is strange since I was raised in Wisconsin. My husband on the other hand hates them and he was raised in the south. He however loves these garlicky, cheesy grits. This is a great dish to serve with barbequed ribs or chicken
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No butter, just oil in this recipe that delivers a rich, chewy, and chocolate-y cake in about an hour.
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For this salad, chef Kevin Willmann of Farmhaus in St. Louis likes using oyster mushrooms over other varieties. To roast them, he makes a delicious garlic oil; save leftover oil for other uses.
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This is an adaptation of a Turkish recipe, a sweet and savory combination of lentils, onions and carrots that can be served hot or at room temperature, as a main dish or a side.
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Get Oil Poached Flounder Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: olive oil, flounder, lemons, parsley
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Olive oil cake with hints of lemon and vanilla is a moist and delicious dessert thanks to the olive oil added to the batter.
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Get Olive Oil Oven Fries Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: potatoes, olive oil, garlic, salt
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Get Garlic and Oil Sauteed Escarole Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: olive oil, garlic, escarole
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Roasted walnut oil adds extra nutty flavor to this simple yet sophisticated dressing made with chives, white wine vinegar, and Dijon mustard.
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Get Olive Oil Brownies Recipe from Food Network
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Garlic is the star in this recipe for grilled New York strip steaks with olive oil-roasted garlic.
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There may never be a better book title than “Aristocrat in Burlap,” a dramatic biography of the Idaho potato, from the first seedlings cultivated by Presbyterian missionaries in the 1840s (with considerable help from Native Americans) to the brown-skinned Burbanks that built today’s $2.7 billion industry The large size of Idaho potatoes — often 3 to 4 pounds each in the 19th century, nourished by volcanic soil and Snake River water — is the source of the mystique The Hasselback potato, named for the hotel in Stockholm where the recipe was invented in the 1950s, shows off the sheer mass of the Idaho potato like nothing else