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This recipe is by Julia Reed and takes 30 minutes, plus 2 hours' refrigeration. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Fresh mangos, simple syrup, and lime juice are the three ingredients in this refreshing sorbet.
Ingredients: mangos, syrup, lime juice
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Fish is simmered in a broth flavored with ginger, galangal, lemon grass, and tamarind juice in this Thai sour fish soup recipe called Tom Byoo.
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Vodka, cointreau and cranberry juice with a splash of lime. Shaken not stirred.
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Marinated New York steak makes a terrific beef fajita. Serve it warm white corn tortillas, salsa, and Mexican cheeses.
cooking.nytimes.com
Melon and cucumber are a marvelous combination, never more so than when ripe tomatoes provide a bridge between the two Parsley, mint and the refreshing bite of Champagne vinegar take the flavors even higher, making this salad both a perfect lunch or a fine start to a summer dinner.
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Get Bay Scallop Ceviche Recipe from Food Network
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Salty white cheese is a savory component that complements melon quite nicely This recipe calls for a mellow, ripe, densely textured variety, possibly as commonplace as cantaloupe or as exotic as a Galia or Charente melon Don’t use watermelon.
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A whole roasted chicken recipe made with an Indian-inspired marinade.
cooking.nytimes.com
Here is a recipe for homemade quinine syrup, which will take the staid gin and tonic up a few notches The syrup is made from cinchona, the bark of a shrub originally from Peru but now cultivated in various tropical climes worldwide, from which is extracted the alkaloid quinine, the original anti-malarial medication It is available at a well-stocked herb store or, as always, online.
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Get Halibut Ceviche Recipe from Food Network
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At the apogee of cooking in vino is this dish, which involves a whole beef roast As befits a thing that humans have been eating since before computers, before cars, before guns — perhaps before science itself — boeuf à la mode tastes less invented than it does discovered The best strategy is to cook it a day before you plan to serve it; it tastes better reheated than immediately, and the seasoning is most even and best distributed when it has time to spend in its rich broth.