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cooking.nytimes.com
When I am planning a Passover menu I look to the Sephardic traditions of the Mediterranean The Sephardim were the Jews of the Iberian Peninsula; they had a rich culture and lived in harmony with Christians and Muslims until the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions at the end of the 15th century, when all non-Christians were expelled from Spain and Portugal The Sephardim were welcomed in Turkey, and many went to Greece, North Africa and the Middle East as well
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A lively take on the potato salad standby, the salty soppressata offers a wonderful contrast to the creamy mildness of potatoes and mozzarella.
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Get Chicken and Dumplings Recipe from Food Network
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A fluffy soufflé with just enough smoked cheddar to enrich the dish without overpowering it.
cooking.nytimes.com
The most persuasive way to convert an eggplant hater is to fry it (the eggplant, not the hater) A less messy approach, however, is to make dip Velvety, smoky dip with a tangy bite has seduced many an eggplant-hating guest.
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Get Sweet and Spicy Grilled Salmon Recipe from Food Network
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This is the Korean equivalent of chicken noodle soup - it is a comforting, cure-all soup. It is also spicy and fresh, and easy to make.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Pierre Franey and takes 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Get Bacon and Ranch Potato Salad Recipe from Food Network
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Get Parmesan-Roasted Broccoli Recipe from Food Network
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Shepherd's pie is adaptable to almost infinite variations. Here, the basic browned ground beef and potato combination is baked with canned French-style green beans and tomato sauce.
cooking.nytimes.com
While all sorts of products, like oysters, were coming by boat from the East to Michigan and the rest of the Midwest during the pioneer period, the European families who settled there generally liked to stick to their ethnic traditions “In the Upper Peninsula, there were the Finlanders, and they had Cornish hens,” said Priscilla Massie, a co-author of the cookbook “Walnut Pickles and Watermelon Cake: A Century of Michigan Cooking.” Then there were the Germans families, who, Ms Massie said, tended to adopt Thanksgiving first