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cooking.nytimes.com
Make sure to cut the carrots and red peppers into the same size julienne (julienne are thin strips) so that they cook at the same rate Both of these vegetables keep well in the refrigerator, so this should be a dish you can pull together easily.
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Get Stir-Fried Beef with Green Beans and Peanut Sauce Recipe from Food Network
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This is cinnamon toast as in toast with sugar, cinnamon and butter-not bread dipped in egg and fried. I add lovely caramelised (sic) apples to make a lovely...
cooking.nytimes.com
Tart unripe tomatoes are the star of this dish: Tossed in a cornmeal batter, then fried in bacon fat for just a couple of minutes per side The crisp outside yields to a soft middle, finished with a relish of pickled tomatoes and smoky-sweet bacon Or, skip the relish, and do as our commenters suggested: Pair it with a creamy mayonnaise sauce, infused with red peppers or even sriracha.
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Look no further for the easy breakfast casserole of your dreams.
Ingredients: bacon, hash browns, chives, eggs, milk, cheddar
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Get Chicken Fried Portobello Mushroom with Mashed Potatoes and Gravy Recipe from Food Network
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Fancy, fancy polenta. First the corn and parmesan polenta is whipped up. Then the polenta is cut into triangles, fried, topped with thick slices of tomato and a sprinkling of chevre and broiled. This glorious triangle is served on a bed of kale.
cooking.nytimes.com
The recipe for these irresistible green beans came to The Times from Jimmy Bradley, the chef and owner of the Red Cat in Manhattan He fries green beans in a tempura batter, then serves them — hot, crunchy, with plenty of salt — aside a sweet-and-spicy mustard sauce You’ll find them on the bar, eaten as meals in themselves, and at most tables running back through the room as appetizers or side dishes
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This recipe is adapted from Samui Institute of Culinary Arts in Thailand, Koh Samui island
cooking.nytimes.com
Katherine Youngblood, the chef de cuisine at Lot 2 in Brooklyn, sautées heirloom broccoli with garlic, chile flakes, anchovy and plenty of lemon, and serves it heaped on olive oil-fried bread showered with pecorino The oily crunch of the bread, the saltiness of the cheese and the sweetness of the broccoli combine into something that, had it not been for my sense of propriety, would have had me licking the plate I made a few minor edits while testing the recipe, taking down the olive oil by just a bit and streamlining the method
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by David Latt and takes 15 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.