Search Results (54 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
I’ve written before that I consider celery an underrated vegetable, capable of contributing nuance and texture to a dish But it would have never occurred to me to have it as one of the main vegetables in a quiche if I hadn’t heard the restaurant critic Jonathan Gold discussing a tarte au céleri that he’d had at Church & State in downtown Los Angeles, a sort of tarte flambée in which celery, celery root and apples stood in for the traditional onions and bacon I figured if it worked so well in that dish, it could also in a quiche
cooking.nytimes.com
Layer thinly sliced potatoes in a gratin dish, and then take your time sautéing the leeks, letting them turn a little golden and crisp around the edges, which brings out their sweetness Add the leeks to the potatoes, and using the same pan in which you cooked the leeks, scrape up the brown bits at the bottom of the pan with a mix of cream, garlic, thyme and nutmeg, pouring that over the potatoes and leeks.
www.delish.com
Regular tomato sauce won't taste the same after this.
cooking.nytimes.com
The real spring vegetable here is the spinach, lush and beautiful at this time of year You can always get red peppers in a supermarket, and when you cook them for a while, as you do here, even the dullest will taste sweet I make the pepper mixture first, then wilt the spinach in the same pan and line the tart shell with the savory mix
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is steeped in Neapolitan tradition: It’s made the day after the big Easter feast, as a way to use up leftover cheese and meat An Easter Monday picnic is also a custom, so the fact that all the goodies are already wrapped up in the bread makes it a very transportable option The herby pesto and Gruyère, though, are my own nontraditional additions