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Baeckeoffe is a traditional Alsatian casserole of potatoes, white wine, and meat, cooked in a dough-sealed dish. This version from French chef Antoine Westermann...
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This recipe was created after preparing soup from several different recipes. I couldn't find the receipe that contained everything that I wanted, so I made my...
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"If I don't have good food at hand, I always eat the wrong thing," Quinn Hatfield says. That's why he keeps grilled meats in his fridge for sandwiches."
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The only way to improve upon cheesy pasta? Bake it in the oven.
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Chef Travis Lett likes buckwheat pasta for its added richness and texture. At the restaurant, Lett cuts the fresh pasta into rough rag shapes and tosses it with summer vegetables; this simplified version uses dried pasta.
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Piquant parsley-based salsa verde with its capers, anchovies and vinegar is a perfect foil for chunks of mild mozzarella.
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Popeye was on to something: Spinach is tip-top nutritionally. It's high in vitamins C, E, and K, as well as beta-carotene, folate, riboflavin, and other antioxidants thought to fend off disease.
cooking.nytimes.com
Fresh raw corn shucked from the cob is ideal here The juice from the tomatoes delivers just the right amount of acidity, so there’s no need for vinegar Eat this as is, by the bowl, or toss it with cooked rice or beans for a more filling meal — you’ll want to add oil and vinegar accordingly
cooking.nytimes.com
This delicious, dill-infused dish is inspired by a northern Greek recipe from Diane Kochilas’s wonderful new cookbook, “The Country Cooking of Greece.” The traditional way to wilt spinach in that part of Greece is to salt it lightly, put it in a colander and knead it against the sides of the colander for about 10 minutes I find blanching or steaming the spinach more efficient, and a better method for those who need to watch their salt intake
www.allrecipes.com
My husband begs me to make this dish. It is a surprisingly great mixture of flavors. You'll love it! Feel free to tailor the ingredient amounts to your taste. This is how we like it, but it is quite flexible.
cooking.nytimes.com
Eric Asimov brought this recipe to The Times in 1998, part of a round-up of some of the specialty sandwich shops cropping up in Manhattan at the time “Sandwiches are as American as Dagwood Bumstead,” he wrote, “and outlandishness has always been part of the recipe.” The new combinations he wrote about went well beyond the ham and cheeses, tuna salads and pastrami on ryes of the past This recipe, adapted from Sandbox, a small chain, elevates the classic chicken salad, with Madras curry powder and slow-roasted tomatoes deepening its savory qualities, and the walnut-raisin bread adding a bit of sweetness and bite.