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Made with Marshmallow Fluff® and whipped topping in addition to the usual milk, eggs, and rum, this recipe is not for your typical eggnog.
Ingredients: milk, vanilla, eggs, rum
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This recipe will make 2 loaves of chewy English muffin bread. It's leavened with yeast and baking soda.
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A no-cook, eggless recipe for vanilla ice cream. This is designed for an old-fashioned ice cream maker that yields 1 gallon; be sure to scale recipe down if you have a countertop model.
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A no-cook recipe designed for a large electric ice cream maker. This recipe contains raw eggs.
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Try your hand at these cheddar crackers, shaped like poker chips.
cooking.nytimes.com
This absurdly rich chocolate cake came to The Times in a 1991 article by Molly O'Neill about Ebinger’s, the legendary chain of Brooklyn bakeries that closed its doors in 1972 after 74 years in business Their wildly popular blackout cake, a three layer devil's food cake filled with dark chocolate pudding, slathered with chocolate frosting and covered with chocolate cake crumbs, had a cult-like following in its day This recipe isn't authentic (the Ebinger family never shared the original recipe with the public), but Ms
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Get Mango Marvel Recipe from Food Network
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These spare ribs are marinated in light and dark soy sauce, orange juice, garlic, and peppercorn, then fried briefly. After simmering the ribs, marinade, and spices such as star anise and cinnamon for an hour, they are ready to serve with white rice. Very flavorful and tender!
www.delish.com
Sweet corn kernels take two different forms in these crispy cakes.
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Lidia uses chestnuts, herbs, and Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese in this holiday classic.
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This apricot sweet sauce really brings out the flavor in corned beef. It is great to serve the sauce over cooked carrots also!
cooking.nytimes.com
In this recipe, herbs are the focus, but to use herbs on a grand scale, it helps to know which ones work in that role and which ones don’t Parsley, obviously, works in abundance: it’s clean-tasting, pleasantly grassy and almost never overwhelming You can add literally a bunch (bunches!) of it to salad, soup, eggs, pasta, grains or beans