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cooking.nytimes.com
This simple, creamy (but not cream-laden) butternut squash soup gets greater depth of flavor from sherry that is stirred in with the stock If you’d rather not use sherry or don’t have it on hand, omit it and use an additional 1/2 cup of stock; your soup will be less complex, but it will still have that rich, sweet squash flavor.
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Roasted red pepper accents this potato soup with a chicken stock base.
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Soy sauce, olive oil, lemon, and garlic are combined for a one-hour steak marinade. Marinate less tender cuts of steak for longer. Recipe can be multiplied.
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Get Giblet Gravy Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: flour, chicken broth
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This is a fantastic side dis to serve on the dinner table. Easy to make is very flavourful and has all the aroma of east indian spices and herbs.
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Cute mini phyllo pastry shells are filled with a fluffy combination of lemon curd, cream cheese, and whipped cream to make elegant treats all ready for you to decorate as you please.
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A recipe a friend gave me, that I've used a couple of times with great success!! Butternut squash, carrots, and ginger each bring a unique quality to this delicious pureed vegetable soup. Absolutely lovely.
cooking.nytimes.com
It's hard to believe, but this rich soup hasn't a drop of butter or cream It came to us from Jeremy Bearman, the chef at Rouge Tomate, a Michelin-starred restaurant in New York known for its healthy and sustainable menu options.
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This eerily strong pumpkin-hued punch is made with white rum, applejack, velvet falernum, Campari, and fruit juice.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Jill Santopietro and takes 12 hours, plus 3 hours' storing and overnight refrigeration. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe was brought to The Times by Regina Schrambling in a 1989 article about a return to simple Italian food after an almost decade long obsession with culinary excess and exotica (goose prosciutto, anyone?) This version of the classic pasta dish is an adaptation of a one from Giuliano Bugialli, an Italian cookbook author and cooking teacher It is simple to prepare – 45 minutes from start to finish -– but full of bright, sophisticated flavors