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Get Salmon with Brown Sugar and Mustard Glaze Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is from the celebrated food writer Laurie Colwin, and in some ways it is quintessentially hers There’s the delicious richness of the dish, its unfussiness and nostalgic value There is the constant awareness of the plight of the busy home cook, those who would just as soon use a package of frozen spinach if the results are just as good as if you washed and chopped an untold number of bunches of fresh spinach yourself
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This recipe is by Regina Schrambling and takes 25 minutes, plus overnight refrigeration. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Get Cherry Moscow Mule Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
Sorghum grains, roasted vegetables, black beans, and a tangy miso dressing make up a filling meal in a bowl in this Buddha bowl recipe.
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Warm and spicy, this stir fry will really wake up your tastebuds. The tofu takes on the wonderful flavors of the sauce. Serve with stir-fried vegetables.
www.delish.com
Kohlrabi tastes a lot like a broccoli stem, but it's milder and sweeter and the texture is crisper. Chef Stephanie Izard of Chicago's Girl & The Goat makes it the star of her delicious salad, served raw in very thin slices.
www.simplyrecipes.com
One-pot Curried Ground Turkey—ground turkey sautéed with onions and garlic, then simmered with Indian seasonings, potatoes, tomatoes, and peas.
cooking.nytimes.com
There are lots of authentic vegetarian Indian dishes, but this hearty curry is more a seat-of-the-pants improvisation, actually based on a French technique The recipe, however, may be used as a template for any number of variations Make it with other winter vegetables, or change the combination to match the seasonal vegetables available throughout the year
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Get Barbecued Chinese Chicken Lettuce Wraps Recipe from Food Network
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In the 1950s, a Hollywood starlet was not expected to squander her talents (or risk her manicure) chopping onions But this recipe, scrawled by Marilyn Monroe on letterhead from an insurance company, suggested that she not only cooked, but cooked confidently and with flair It bears the mark of the Bay Area and influences of Italian cooking, possibly picked up from her marriage to Joe DiMaggio at San Francisco City Hall in 1954