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Get Fried Green Tomatoes with Shrimp and Remoulade Sauce Recipe from Food Network
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A creamy blend of buttermilk, sour cream, vinegar, chives, and parsley.
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Martha Stewart Living editor Lucinda Scala Quinn shares her recipe for baked artichoke hearts.
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A recipe with so much taste it will wow your friends, and wow you with how easy it is to make. Just try not to drool while you're cooking.
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This beautiful plum tart, adapted from the pastry chef Alex Levin of Osteria Morini in Washington, brings together a sablé butter crust flavored with vanilla bean; colorful, juicy plum slices; and an almond cream filling with a lovely flavor that complements the fruit Using confectioners' sugar in the crust gives you a texture that is finer and smoother than if you use granulated sugar And the sugar in the crust and filling removes the need to sweeten the plums (which in turn means the fruit juices won't leach into the dough) — though you'll want to sprinkle a little turbinado sugar over the top for added crunch.
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Sauteed mushrooms are marinated in a tarragon vinegar-enhanced salad dressing mixture.
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Thinly sliced oranges are candied in a honey syrup that lends them a faint floral perfume.
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Forget everything you've learned about marinating chicken. The key to these grilled chicken skewers is to marinate the meat in olive oil, lemon juice, vinegar, herbs, and spices for several hours before grilling them to crispy, yet moist, perfection.
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This consommé célestine recipe uses a classic French method to create clear chicken stock that is garnished with herbed crêpe ribbons.
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Get Arctic Char in Salt Crust with Saffron Aioli Recipe from Food Network
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Meat sauce is one of the recipes many American home cooks start with It seems so easy; brown some hamburger, pour in a jar of marinara, and presto Meat sauce
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The chicken stew here does have an authentic origin, but I have lightened it a little by dispensing with the cream that would be added luxuriously in its country of origin And you can cheerfully use a dry or semi-dry from anywhere in the world I have nothing against the regular coq au vin, but I might actually prefer this sprightlier version