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A classic French onion soup recipe, made with long-cooked onions and beef broth, and gratinéed with a baguette toast, Gruyère, and Parmesan cheese.
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Get Bite-Size Beef Wellingtons Recipe from Food Network
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Get Mesa Grill's Southwestern Potato Salad Recipe from Food Network
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Get Apple Muffins Recipe from Food Network
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The following recipe is rich and tender, yet baker-friendly. Bonus: This silky-smooth filling tastes a little less treacly sweet, a plus for most pecan pie lovers.
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Get Chicken and Arugula Pita Pockets Recipe from Food Network
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Bread pudding is the ultimate comfort food. In this version, cubes of cinnamon raisin bread are baked in a rich custard and topped with sweet vanilla rum sauce.
cooking.nytimes.com
This gorgeous tart is adapted from "Sweeter Off the Vine," by Yossy Arefi, a cookbook of fruit desserts for every season It's an ideal vehicle for the ripest strawberries at the height of the season, a dessert that makes more of a splash than just serving berries and cream but still has that simple charm The only tricky part is the crust, which could crack as you transfer it to a serving board
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Hamusta soup, a popular Middle Eastern vegetable soup, gets a hit of tanginess from lemon juice added to the broth.
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This adaptation of Alice Waters’s lemon meringue pie came to the Times in a 1987 article in the Sunday magazine It takes a little time, but your efforts will be rewarded with a spectacular centerpiece dessert to be proud of: a cloud of toasted meringue atop a pool of buttery and bright lemon curd in a light and flaky crust If you can't find Meyer lemons, regular supermarket lemons will make a worthy substitute.
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Golden, crispy potato slices are topped with three different cheeses, chicken, green onions, and jalapenos in this great game-day snack recipe for Irish potato nachos.
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Even though this cake is packed full of dates, bananas and tahini (also known as tahini paste in Britain), it’s surprisingly soft and light You can serve it warm, if you like, with the tahini cream cheese and bananas alongside, although it’s worth the wait, if you can, for it to cool so that it can be assembled as a cake A note on tahini: We always use tahini from one of the Arabic brands, which tend to be creamy and nutty (as opposed to a Greek or Cypriot tahini, which can be bitter and sticky)