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Green peas are sauteed with mushrooms onion and garlic in this quick side dish. These will go well with steak or fish.
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This hot and spicy all-purpose paste packs a punch, so use it in some moderation for chicken, shrimp, pork, beef, and fish.
cooking.nytimes.com
In assembling this rather straightforward pork ragout, my main question was how to produce a sauce with substantial consistency, considering I had not planned to use any flour or other thickener I thought that finely diced apple, which would melt into the sauce, might do the trick It did, though also mincing the shallots meant that they, too, would add body
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This spice-laden vegetarian chili is topped with a smooth, cooling avocado cream to balance the hot peppers and smoky chipotle.
cooking.nytimes.com
The authentic version of this Greek vegetable dish calls for twice as much olive oil I like the combination of kalamata olives, cauliflower and tomatoes Serve it with whole grains, such as spelt, bulgur or barley.
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Get Duck Confit Poutine Recipe from Food Network
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White beans slow cooked with vegetables and fresh herbs - parsley, rosemary, lemon thyme, and savory.
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Get Marinated Chicken Breasts Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
A typical ratatouille recipe has you sauté all the vegetables separately, then combine them That seemed too laborious for a potpie So I streamlined the method by making a sauce on the stove with the peppers and tomatoes, stirring in roasted eggplant and zucchini, and sausage for extra flavor, and baking everything covered in dough.
cooking.nytimes.com
Salumi isn't just for sandwiches: Dino Bugica, the executive chef at Taverna Santi in Geyserville, Calif., layers lardo over roasted potatoes and cherry tomatoes for a simple yet rich side dish.
Ingredients: potatoes, rosemary, lardo
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Jane Sigal and takes 4 hours 15 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
cooking.nytimes.com
This golden and glorious mash-up of potato gratin and Hasselback potatoes, from the acclaimed food science writer J Kenji López-Alt, has been engineered to give you both creamy potato and singed edge in each bite The principal innovation here is placing the sliced potatoes in the casserole dish vertically, on their edges, rather than laying them flat as in a standard gratin, in order to get those crisp ridges on top