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This recipe is by Jill Santopietro 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 rich potato soup with NO milk or cream. Garnish with fresh parsley.
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This recipe is by Elaine Sciolino and takes 55 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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This egg white casserole with turkey sausage, vegetables, and Cheddar cheese can be made at the beginning of the week for a quick breakfast each morning.
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By sauteing vegetables before slow cooking them, you'll add lots of extra flavor to this hearty, vegan leek and potato soup.
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The cookbook author and culinary historian Jessica B Harris adapted this recipe from a meal she once had in the South of France at the home of James Baldwin, and it appears in her 2017 memoir, "My Soul Looks Back." It's a simple Provençal soup — French country cooking at its best — made with whatever vegetables are in season and brightened with generous spoonfuls of green pesto You could use a vegetable stock or a light chicken stock instead of water, if you happen to have one, but there's no need: A good dollop of pesto will deliver a bright, garlicky flavor that permeates every bite. 
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Get Best Basic White Rice Recipe from Food Network
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Get Warm French Lentils Recipe from Food Network
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A quick and easy alternative to regular Sloppy Joes, these are made with ground beef in a creamy white sauce.
cooking.nytimes.com
This creamy, pale yellow risotto is studded with chewy fresh corn kernels, making for a nice mix of textures Making your own corn stock deepens the flavor of this dish, but if you don’t have the time, chicken stock will work The dish is also pleasingly light, for risotto — finishing the dish by folding in airy whipped cream adds richness without also adding heft
cooking.nytimes.com
Here is a fairly basic recipe for stew, a low-and-slow variety that calls for simmering lamb (though you could use beef) with barley and root vegetables, then adding some kale at the end so that it doesn’t entirely collapse It’s a simple equation that takes in whatever ingredients you have on hand Start with meat, sturdy root vegetables (potatoes, sweet potatoes, turnips, rutabaga, parsnip, carrots) and grains (barley, wheat berries, farro), add water and simmer away