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Golden and crispy, these panko and coconut crusted shrimp with a sweet and hot dipping sauce are easy and delicious.
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This Chinese-inspired salad has complex flavors and is quite refreshing At the market, choose eggplants that are firm and shiny; they will taste sweeter and have fewer seeds Make it several hours ahead or up to a day in advance
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Get Coconut Oil Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipe from Food Network
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This chili oil, a kind of rough harissa, made from mild dried New Mexican chilies, pounded garlic and chopped mint, has so much body and flavor it’s more salsa than sauce.
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Ricotta and creamy Taleggio cheeses top these wonderful white pizzas.
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I’ve always been intrigued by olive oil cakes and decided to switch out half the butter in the original recipe for this plum cake for olive oil I spread the batter in a 10-inch tart pan and topped it with delicious pluots from the farmers’ market You can serve this as a dessert, a coffee cake, or a sweet snack.
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Chock-full of lima beans, corn and chunks of catfish, this Creole-seasoned stew is a Southern delight. The heat level is moderate, but you can increase the spiciness by adding more Tabasco sauce or a bit of cayenne pepper.
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Pieces of juicy pear are folded in a gingery muffin batter and baked into a tender and nicely spiced muffin perfect for breakfast or even dessert.
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Here, coconut oil deepens the natural caramelized flavor of roasted sweet potatoes, and it adds a delicate coconut essence Brown sugar and nutmeg sweeten the dish, and a dash of black pepper makes it for adults It's just delicious.
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This is a very old recipe from at least the 30's. The name comes from the old expression meaning 'great'.
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Get Couscous with Dried Dates 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