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In this savory skillet dinner, rhubarb, onions and garlic are simmered with white wine and butter into a rich sauce for browned chicken parts I call for a whole, cut-up chicken here, so you’ll have the different parts to choose from at the table (Just be sure to watch the breasts carefully; they might finish cooking before the dark meat.) But you can use your favorite chicken part instead
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Brothy and brimming with beets, parsnips, turnip, celery root, and slices of kielbasa, this earthy beet soup gets a finishing touch of sour cream and fresh dill. Serve it in big bowls with plenty of crusty bread for an appetizing cold-weather dinner.
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Chef John pairs sweet with heat in this quick nectarine salsa with red bell peppers, jalapeno peppers, and cilantro.
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Get Teriyaki Chicken with Pickled Cucumbers Recipe from Food Network
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Get McAlister Potatoes Recipe from Food Network
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Get Jacques's French Potato Salad Recipe from Food Network
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Get Grilled French Bread Pizza with Mushroom Pesto and Fontina Cheese Recipe from Food Network
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cooking.nytimes.com
Simon Hopkinson is a first-rate pleaser, a chef who was never after recognition but one who wanted to produce terrific food his customers would love He’s best known as the founding chef of Bibendum, the London restaurant started by Terence Conran in 1987 and recognized as one of the restaurants that marked the end of that city’s postwar cooking slump His perfect (and not difficult) sticky toffee pudding is a dessert that according to Hopkinson first appeared on menus in Britain in the late 1960s but in fact has its origins in Canada