Search Results (4,231 found)
www.allrecipes.com
Make a seafood bake on your grill using foil packets to contain shrimp, clams, scallops, corn on the cob, and cherry tomatoes, all drizzled with lemon butter.
Ingredients: butter, lemon peel, corn, chives
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Ginger Lemonade Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: sugar, ginger, lemon peel, lemons
www.allrecipes.com
Use winter's crop of fresh tangerines to make this sweet and tangy martini.
Ingredients: tangerine juice, vodka, liqueur
www.delish.com
This grown-up punch is perfect for a winter cocktail party.
www.chowhound.com
I used this recipe for a Halloween party, except I put olives in them as well to look like floating eyeballs. They were a big hit!
Ingredients: orange, orange juice, vodka
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Safflower Madeleines Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
Sweet and fruity! Low-fat and perfect for after-school snacks.
www.delish.com
Your next brunch needs this fruit salad.
www.allrecipes.com
A simply delicious meal! Sure to make your kitchen smell amazing! This recipe is very versatile, as well. For example, you may find it easier to use lima beans instead of edamame. Also you could use a different type of fish if you don't like tuna. You could even use fresh herbs for a burst of flavor! Feel free to experiment. Enjoy!
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Buttery Manhattan Recipe from Food Network
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.
cooking.nytimes.com
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.