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Passed on through the generations, this recipe for the famous Frango® mints makes a perfect holiday or hostess gift.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe amplifies the green in the garlic by stirring it into an herb-filled salsa verde You can also use regular garlic, though you might want to reduce the amount by half I also added garlic chives to the mix just because I saw them at the farmers’ market and figured a little more garlic flavor could only help
cooking.nytimes.com
Kathy Tsaples, the author of the cookbook “Sweet Greek Life: My Shared Table,” inspired this savory tart The quality of phyllo dough varies hugely from one brand to another It’s particularly important here to get a good-quality phyllo as there is so much of it
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John Besh of Restaurant August in New Orleans serves this lightly sweet, fruity white-wine sangria over plenty of ice cubes. "Use Viognier it has a nice balance of fruit and acidity," he says.
Ingredients: grand marnier, mango, peaches, mint
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On our honeymoon we stayed with some friends in London and they made us this drink - now we can't stop making it! It is especially delicious on a hot, summer afternoon. The cucumber and mint are odd, but don't leave them out - they make this drink!
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This pita sandwich recipe has sliced roasted lamb, marinated cucumbers and onions, and a drizzle of mint and cilantro yogurt sauce on top.
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Get Cantaloupe Gazpacho Shooter Recipe from Food Network
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Get Red Snapper with Fava Bean Puree Recipe from Food Network
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This summer salad recipe tosses squash, grapes, and bell pepper with pine nuts, mint, and a lemony Moroccan-inspired dressing.
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This sweet-and-savory side dish is best served with quinoa or brown rice.
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Classic. Comforting. Insanely flavorful. What more could you want?
cooking.nytimes.com
In 2007, if you were looking for a sign of the culinary times, you could do no better than the one prominently displayed in San Francisco, in my local Übermarket for the conscientious shopper: “Organic Summer Squash, $3.99 a pound.” Our growing food fetishization created a new produce category: luxury squash I was disturbed but also intrigued: perhaps familiarity had blinded me to squash’s delicate charms — at these prices it clearly deserved more than a typically bland sauté or a quick turn on the grill Given its etymology (the word “squash” comes from a Native American word meaning “eaten raw”), maybe it shouldn’t be cooked at all