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This easy beef stew recipe is a classic slow-cooked dish with chuck roast, carrots, celery, and potatoes simmered in a rich red-wine sauce.
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This is a mildly hot Cajun spice mix you make yourself with common spices from your pantry. For those who like it hotter, add the optional crushed red pepper. This makes a great oven Cajun hashbrowns!
cooking.nytimes.com
A coq au vin is a classic French stew in which chicken is braised slowly in red wine and a little brandy to yield a supremely rich sauce filled with tender meat, crisp bits of bacon, mushrooms and burnished pearl onions Traditional recipes call for a whole cut-up chicken, but using all dark meat gives you a particularly succulent dish without the risk of overcooked white meat However, if you would rather substitute a whole cut-up bird, just add the breasts in the last 30 minutes of simmering
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The staff at The Meatball Shop in Manhattan eat these around the clock You’ll often find them at the bar with a big bowl of these and a side of steamed or sautéed spinach You can also top with Spinach-Basil Pesto
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With beans, potatoes, olives, and tuna, this classic salad doesn't rely on lettuce for crunch.
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This recipe is by Steven Raichlen and takes 35 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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When you get your hands on ice-cold oysters straight from the Chesapeake Bay, it would be foolish to do anything beyond shuck and slurp But in the 19th century, oysters were so plentiful in eastern Virginia and Maryland that they burrowed their way into the region's cooking traditions Most were smoked and salted, roasted over fire, dropped into chowders and stews and used in stuffings
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The Roasted New Potato Salad With Olives exemplifies an amazingly quick - cooking technique. Instead of roasting the potatoes in a preheated oven, start them in a cold oven and roast them as the oven heats. Cooked this way, they brown nearly twice as fast.
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This recipe comes from www.gourmetkoshercooking.com. It's so delicious and is a different way of preparing the same old ingredients Also, check out more recipes...
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Pissaladière is a signature Provençal dish from Nice and environs, a pizza spread with a thick, sweet layer of onions that have been cooked slowly until they caramelize and garnished with olives and anchovies.
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Make your own Herbes de Provence rather than paying for someone else to do it. It goes great in salads, fish, chicken, beef and pork. The fragrance is amazing!
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This recipe is by David Tanis and takes 1 hour. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.