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cooking.nytimes.com
When you cook a large piece of meat or a whole fish in a thick crust of salt, the crust provides both gentle heat and even seasoning For beef tenderloin, a relatively bland cut, salt-baking is easy and ensures a particularly tasty dish Serving the perfectly plain, perfectly cooked beef alongside a riotous crunchy salad of fried croutons, tomatoes, lemon segments and scallions makes for a lively main course
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Joanna Pruess and takes 20 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Get Radicchio, Pear and Arugula Salad Recipe from Food Network
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Get Garam Masala Chicken Pot Pie Recipe from Food Network
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Get Italian Chicken Sliders with Tomato Jam Recipe from Food Network
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www.simplyrecipes.com
Baked Chicken Marinara - chicken pieces coated with Parmesan and bread crumbs, fried and covered with a tomato basil marinara sauce, and topped with melted Mozzarella. A flavorful alternative to chicken parmesan.
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Get Marinated Salumi Sandwich Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Light and refreshing, yet packed with flavor from herbs, jalapeños and garlic, this is an easy, after-work meal that can be endlessly adapted to suit what you’ve got on hand Substitute other thinly sliced raw vegetables for the cucumbers (zucchini, carrot, radishes, celery, cabbage, fennel), and other herbs for the cilantro and parsley (dill, basil, mint) Just be sure not to overcook the flattened chicken, which can happen in an instant.
cooking.nytimes.com
Here, I’ve riffed on a classic French salade niçoise I save the anchovy for the dressing, but anchovy admirers can add more for garnish — and anchovy avoiders can simply leave them out The only cooking is boiling the potatoes and haricots verts, which can be done together in the same pot
cooking.nytimes.com
Here's a stir-fry far better than most take-out Chinese, and you can make it with any lean cut of meat — flank steak, London broil, tenderloin, sirloin or skirt steak — so long as it is cut thin against the grain Most takeout joints use snow peas, but sugar snaps are juicier and more succulent, and just as crunchy (Their downside is that they are slightly more work: they need to be thinly sliced.) As for the sauce, it's simple: thick dark soy sauce (tamari works well), sesame oil, chicken broth and Madeira.
www.chowhound.com
A vegetarian version of one of the most well-known Chinese soups with mushrooms, bamboo, and tofu.