Search Results (876 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe was designed for new parents, who must cook stealthily to keep from waking an infant The silent chef must follow a few simple, yet unforgiving rules: any busy, attention-demanding work has to happen before baby's bedtime; recipes must easily tolerate a lengthy span between prep and finish, ideally resting at room temperature to lessen the mess and effort involved in refrigerating and reheating; and the final steps, after baby's bedtime, have to be both quiet and fairly routine.
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I took the idea of wrapping beef in pastry from the traditional beef Wellington to make a simpler dish with the kick of fennel seeds and cayenne. I serve these with tomato sauce.
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Kohlrabi tastes a lot like a broccoli stem, but it's milder and sweeter and the texture is crisper. Chef Stephanie Izard of Chicago's Girl & The Goat makes it the star of her delicious salad, served raw in very thin slices.
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Chutney is a favorite British condiment for everything from cheese to roasts. This sweet-and-smoky version is perfect with crackers as a starter, spread on a grilled cheddar sandwich, or served with roasted pork.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Craig Claiborne With Pierre Franey and takes 1 hour 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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A fragrant curry powder made from scratch takes this family-friendly Japanese chicken and vegetable curry to a new level of deliciousness.
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The heat of harissa — which is a North Afican chili sauce — is made for the luscious flavor of lamb.
cooking.nytimes.com
Socca is street food in Nice, in the South of France This Los Angeles version, served at the restaurant Sqirl, makes it a meal by adding shredded vegetables to the chickpea pancake and tops it with greens and creamy labneh This recipe calls for carrots, winter squash (Sqirl generally uses kabocha) or zucchini — pick one and proceed
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Ask your butcher for coarsely ground pork shoulder (or grind it yourself), add a few tasty seasonings, and enjoy your own homemade breakfast sausage patties.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe was developed to accompany the dense, earthy wines of Sicily, specifically the ones made with the grape known as nero d’Avola It is a hearty beef ragout enriched with the wine, fresh herbs, olives, chiles and tomatoes, roasted to reduce the liquid and concentrate the flavor Like most treasures of the stew pot, the dish benefits from a rest and a reheat
cooking.nytimes.com
A bright and tangy salad cuts the heaviness of the typical Thanksgiving meal This one, with fennel, celery, apples and toasted walnuts, is all crunch, which the carb-heavy meal can generally use more of You can make the dressing a day ahead and store it in the fridge, but don't dress the salad until an hour before serving.