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This recipe is by Pierre Franey and takes 1 hour. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Get Bebek Betutu: Roast Duck in Banana Leaf Recipe from Food Network
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At his new chicken-focused restaurant in Atlanta, Bantam + Biddy, Shaun Doty uses an Old Hickory rotisserie to cook his birds, which are coated with a lemony fennel-seed rub.
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Simple roasted chicken parts are perfect for a weeknight meal. Youll have just enough concentrated jus to drizzle a little over each oregano-scented piece.
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Roast pork with crackling tastes too good to be eaten only on special occasions.
cooking.nytimes.com
A classic Provençal beef daube, or slow-baked stew, is made with quantities of red wine, like the recipes that Julia Child often made in her house in Provence, La Pitchoune Patricia Wells, a former New York Times food writer in Paris, also lives part-time in the South of France, and she has adapted the daube for white wine, which plays a more subtle part in flavoring the stew The large amount of liquid makes a tender braise that can also be served as a sauce for pasta: penne, gnocchi and long noodles like tagliatelle are familiar in the region, which borders Italy on the east.
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Cook pork shoulder, green salsa, onion, cilantro, and serrano chile peppers together in a slow cooker for a tasty filling for tacos, enchiladas, and burritos.
Ingredients: white onion, roast, cilantro, peppers
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Layers of cooked shredded pork sirloin roast, bread cubes, green chiles, goat cheese, and fresh sage are baked in an egg-milk base for this hearty brunch or main dish casserole.
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It's easy to make a replica of the Starbucks® Mocha Frappuccino®: steep your own cold brew, then shake it with condensed milk and cocoa! Keep the concentrate in your fridge for a month.
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Get Bacon Cheeseburgers Recipe from Food Network
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Meaty all-American burgers are best made with grass-fed beef, which has a sweeter flavor and tender texture. If you don't own a grinder, have the butcher grind the meat on a coarse setting.
cooking.nytimes.com
There are a few cool tricks to this recipe, one of which I picked up from an old issue of Bon Appétit, one I learned from Robb Walsh, the great Tex-Mex scholar and restaurateur who runs El Real Tex-Mex in Houston, and a final one I learned by happenstance First, for the thickening agent in the chile sauce, toast raw all-purpose flour in a pan until it is nutty and golden brown, then reserve it to stir in with the browned beef later in the recipe Second, if you like truly melty cheese in the classic Tex-Mex tradition, use a mixture of American cheese, like Velveeta, with the Cheddar you use inside and on top of the finished enchiladas