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Here's our impossibly easy pies packed with pork and Green Giant® mushrooms; made using Original Bisquick® mix – perfect for breakfast.
cooking.nytimes.com
One of my favorite Middle Eastern mezze is deep-fried cauliflower served with tahini garlic sauce I decided to try the dish with broccoli, but instead of deep-frying the broccoli I roasted it, a method that requires a lot less oil The buds on the broccoli florets toast to a crispy brown, and the texture of the stalk remains crisp
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Crispy fried plantains. A plantain is a very firm banana. Serve as side dish with your meal or as appetizers.
Ingredients: oil, green plantain, water
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Get Cream Cheese Wontons Recipe from Food Network
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Thin slices of boneless beef short rib are briefly marinated in a sweet and hot marinade, then quickly seared in a hot skillet and served over steamed rice in this classic Korean dish.
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This crunchy cashew salad is loaded with colorful bell peppers, avocado, grapes, and feta cheese for a salad the whole family will love.
cooking.nytimes.com
Lacking the cult status of ripe summer tomatoes or the esoteric cachet of watermelon radishes and purslane, peppers may be one of the season’s least celebrated vegetables Though their charms are many, my favorite is their stuffable shape The heat of the cherry pepper varies from fiery to mellow, though the riper red ones tend to be sweeter and none are as spicy as the jalapeño
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Cubed beef steak is marinated in soy sauce, sesame oil, and sugar for at least 4 hours. The meat is sauteed and added to the reduced marinade along with chopped green onions and white wine.
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This rich baked fajita is composed of black beans, pinto beans, tortillas, and cheese between layers of sauteed chicken and vegetables.
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Get Achiote Marinated Baby Chickens Stuffed with Chorizo and Mustard Greens Recipe from Food Network
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Sweet English peas with a tangy horseradish, sour cream, and mayonnaise dressing.
cooking.nytimes.com
Put a couple of whole cabbages over a hot fire on a grill, and leave them there, turning every few minutes when you get a chance, until they look like something tragic and ruined You don’t need to season them, or oil them, or remove the thick outer leaves the way you’d do if you were cooking them lightly or shredding them raw You just need to burn them, slowly and deeply, so that they soften within and take on the flavor of fire