Search Results (21,095 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
Celery is an underappreciated vegetable that brings wonderful crunch, perfume and bitterness to a salad (and no wonder: It’s related to carrots, parsley and fennel) Here it is front and center in a main-dish salad, especially satisfying with a poached egg or some charcuterie on the side Buy full green heads of celery, not the pale hearts, and make sure the leaves are still attached
www.chowhound.com
This classic French beef stew recipe from Tyler Florence has braised beef, mushrooms, and pearl onions in a rich red wine sauce.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Crown Roast of Pork with Chestnut Sausage Stuffing Recipe from Food Network
www.foodnetwork.com
Get 4 Layer Cheesecake Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
This simple curry serves as a fine introduction to the Indian home cooking of Meera Sodha, a British cookbook author whose “Made in India: Recipes From an Indian Family Kitchen” was released in 2015 The recipe for this curry, her "ultimate comfort food,'' derives from the one her Indian-born mother cooked for Sodha when she was growing up in Lincolnshire and for which she pined for during her college years in London It provides a thick, gingery, garlic-flecked tomato sauce with deep notes of cinnamon and cumin, and a low flame of chile heat, surrounding small chunks of skinless chicken thigh, with slivered almonds scattered over the top at the end.
www.chowhound.com
This easy recipe for noodles with peanut sauce has fresh vegetables and makes a fast, filling dinner with pieces of sliced chicken breast added on top.
cooking.nytimes.com
Fish tacos, that great meal of the Baja Peninsula, and a taste of summer They are simple to make, no more complicated in fact than a hamburger or a mess of pancakes, and they are considerably more flavorful Fried in strips and served onboard warm corn tortillas with a simple salsa, a pinch of fresh cabbage, plenty of lime and a cream sauce you might want to punch up with some chopped chipotle, these fish tacos can turn a cold night into bluebird summer, transporting you from chill into deep humidity and bliss.
cooking.nytimes.com
This mac 'n' cheese, adapted from the book "Real Food Has Curves" by Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough, is quicker and easier to make than the classic casserole It is hearty comfort food that easily functions as a main dish for vegetarians.