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cooking.nytimes.com
This is a soulful dish: handmade meatball sausages subtly seasoned with onion, garlic, cumin, cinnamon, allspice and nutmeg and baked in a bubbling tomato sauce It was originally made by Greeks who lived in Smyrna, which is now Izmir, Turkey In the early 1920s many of them returned to Greece after the Greco-Turkish war.
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The fun idea here is to make vegetables part of the dressing. Scott Conant sautés strips and cubes of parsnip, carrot, squash, and celery root with thyme, vinegar, and oil, then uses them to dress the Bibb lettuce.
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Pistachio cake, made with pistachio pudding mix, is a moist, light green cake perfect for St. Patrick's Day or Easter.
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This consommé célestine recipe uses a classic French method to create clear chicken stock that is garnished with herbed crêpe ribbons.
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This recipe makes gluten-free homemade tortillas with coconut flour, egg whites, and baking powder.
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Deep-fried salt and pepper shrimp have a hint of Chinese 5-spice for a flavorful appetizer or salad-topper.
cooking.nytimes.com
You find variations on this fava bean purée in Southern Italy, the Middle East and Morocco This one, from Apulia, is the simplest The purée should have the texture of hummus.
Ingredients: fava beans, salt, garlic, olive oil
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This hearty chicken tortilla soup recipe is thickened with corn tortillas and is full of shredded chicken, peppers, tomatoes, and chili spices.
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Rice wine vinegar, honey, wasabi paste, and fresh lime juice are the key elements of this spunky dressing you can serve over a salmon salad.
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This heavenly wild mushroom ragout with creme fraiche is fantastic for breakfast, lunch, or dinner.
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Get Tomato Basil Cones Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Fragrant, intense and full of fiery chile, this lamb stir-fry isn’t for the timid eater For the most authentic flavor, it’s worth your while to seek out Sichuan peppercorns, which have a woodsy, tongue-numbing, camphor quality (They are available at specialty spice markets, in Chinatown, or online.) You can substitute regular black peppercorns, but you won’t get the same punch