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This recipe yields a homemade tomato soup by blending canned diced tomatoes, tomato paste, chicken stock, cream, and seasonings.
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This warming dish, a great addition to the holiday table, is so simple that you'll want to make it all year long.
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This is French onion soup made the easy way! It's the perfect starter for fall or winter dinners. The secret is a splash of sherry vinegar and sherry wine. Top with a slice of baguette bread, sprinkle with Gruyere, and broil to golden brown for an impressive first course.
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Get Black Beans Recipe from Food Network
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Get Fried and Stuffed Rice Balls (Arancini di Riso) Recipe from Food Network
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Use real chicken fat (schmaltz) to make this chopped liver the best ever. Served with matzos, it makes a perfect seder appetizer.
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Marcia Kiesel uses porcini mushrooms to make her chicken thigh sauté with roasted garlic cloves.
cooking.nytimes.com
The idea behind this recipe was to create a contemporary American chicken dinner The result is a whole-bird meal that takes a bit more time and effort than a simple roast chicken but offers an outcome that is just short of mind-blowing, with a variety of tastes and textures the classic cannot touch You can make this dish with chicken parts and water or canned stock, but it’s more efficient — and far tastier — to begin with a three-to-four-pound chicken and go through the whole process
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Curried chicken salad spooned into endive "boats" for a crisp, delightful appetizer.
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Recipe for Citrus Pomegranate Chicken Over Whole Wheat Couscous, as seen in the January 2006 issue of 'O, The Oprah Magazine.'
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It takes three chefs 12 hours to prepare Wylie Dufresne's chicken confit with peas and carrots at his WD-50 restaurant in Manhattan, but less than an hour for a home cook to make this one.
cooking.nytimes.com
Alain Sailhac, dean emeritus of the French Culinary Institute in New York and one of New York’s most venerable French chefs, gives inspiration here to recapture the glory of the chicken breast, that popular yet generally overcooked piece of meat He suggests cutting the breast in half horizontally to make two thin pieces, then topping them with quick-cooking vegetables like mushrooms, zucchini or tomatoes, and roasting everything together This supremely juicy and complexly flavored dish uses that technique and is a snap to put together.