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cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Alice Hart and takes 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
cooking.nytimes.com
For casual entertaining, the tapas experience translates well to the small home kitchen One delicious hot tapas classic easily made at home is called pinchos Moruños, or Moorish skewers, essentially small kebabs of pork marinated in Arabic (Moorish) spices and grilled, usually on a hot steel plancha Because most Muslim Arabs wouldn’t eat pork, one presumes the original dish was lamb
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Truly distinguished ice cold refreshing drink! Lemon zest is steeped in vodka for a week, then mixed with simple syrup and aged for 2 more weeks.
Ingredients: fruit, vodka, sugar, water
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This classic German sausage comes in countless variations—ours features pork, veal, and a delicate mixture of caraway, pepper, and marjoram.
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Seasoned green onions go well with many dishes, both Korean and non Korean. Mix this up and serve with Korean Grilled Meats, or your favorite grill or BBQ recipe...
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This fluffy quinoa tabbouleh salad is unusually delicious with the addition of tuna marinated in soy and lime, shiitake mushrooms cooked in dashi, and a pungent...
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Get Dark Chocolate S'mores Recipe from Food Network
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Use dukkah as a crunchy coating for chicken and fish, or sprinkle it over salads along with a little sumac.
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Save time by making classic buffalo wing appetizer into a dip, with loads of chicken, Frank's RedHot sauce, cream cheese, and blue cheese. Chowhound's chicken...
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A nice crunch in this salad, bacon bits, sunflower seeds, diced broccoli, cauliflower, and onion are tossed with a yummy, slightly sweet and sour dressing and chilled.
cooking.nytimes.com
Dongbei cai is the food of Northeast China Weiliang Chen, the chef at Northeast Taste Chinese Food, the biggest of the Dongbei restaurants in Queens, makes an elegant, tender version of a popular Dongbei stir-fry of lamb with dried chilies, made fragrant and crunchy with cumin seeds — a legacy of the nomadic Mongols who long ruled Central Asia, carrying spices on horseback along with their arrows Lamb is considered a Northern taste and excessively “strong” by many Chinese cooks; it is always cooked with powerful aromatics, like chili peppers and garlic, to subdue it.