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A zesty shake of vinegar, cilantro, garlic salt, lemon juice, oil and sugar dances with pasta tossed with onion, bell pepper, olives, tomatoes and green chilies. Let the salad chill for a while to bring out all the festive flavors.
www.delish.com
Kenny Rochford, general manage of Medlock Ames winery, pickles Chioggia beets from the winery gardens to use in the tasting room. They're perfect in a salad with parsley and fennel fronds.
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This is the perfect side dish for East meets West. The American classic gets a modern update by adding spicy chopped fermented cabbage and Korean chili paste.
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Carrots are cooked until tender, grated, and then topped with tomato dressing and mint. Note: You could try using julienne carrots instead of grated, if you like.
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This is a recipe I discovered about 25 years ago when grape gelatin was hard to find! It's a terrific side dish or a delicious dessert. It's very rich in flavor and can be made ahead of time. Also good with cherry gelatin and cherry pie filling.
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A recipe for breakfast empanadas
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A baked pie shell cuts down the prep time of this coconut cream pie with a meringue topping.
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Eggs Benedict always makes breakfast special, even more so when you add Dungeness crab and steamed artichokes to the rich hollandaise and poached egg.
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This side dish of corn and green onion is dressed in white wine vinegar, lime juice, and tarragon.
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This honey–poppy seed salad dressing recipe is a mixture of cider vinegar, honey, mustard, and poppy seeds.
cooking.nytimes.com
Chocolate-rum mousse, which ran in The Times in 1966, was a remarkably efficient recipe in two distinct ways First, it invoked nearly every food trend of its moment: chocolate desserts were an exotic new fix; any respectable grown-up dessert contained rum; mousse suggested that you understood French cooking, or at least pretended to; two cups of cream was de rigueur; and the recipe assumed you owned one of the kitchen’s latest appliances, the home blender Second, the newfangled blender actually did make the recipe a wonder of efficiency: all you had to do was layer the ingredients and blend, and a dinner-party mousse was yours.
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Get "Old Bay" Hollandaise Recipe from Food Network