Search Results (12,882 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
John Folse, a chef and educator in Louisiana, shared this recipe for legs of rabbit boned and stuffed with crabmeat and served with a light red-wine sauce.
www.allrecipes.com
My mother got this recipe from a friend years ago and it's become an integral part of our Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations! We leave it in the freezer and we all serve ourselves from there!
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Lowfat Green Tea, Honey and Nutmeg Smoothies Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: vanilla, green, honey, ice
www.foodnetwork.com
Get White Sangria Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
A classic red currant jelly made from fresh currants. This came from my one of my mother's handwritten recipe cards. I do not know its origin, but know it probably dates back to the early 1940's.
Ingredients: currants, water, sugar, pectin
www.allrecipes.com
This recipe requires only sugar, cinnamon, and water to make a sweet coating for almonds.
Ingredients: water, sugar, cinnamon, almonds
www.delish.com
Use this pie dough recipe to make our Butternut Squash and Bacon Quiche or our Chicken and Kale Hand Pies with Cheddar Crust.
Ingredients: flour, salt, butter, water
www.chowhound.com
A simple and nice vegetarian dish using lentil; it is a specialty from Shan State, Myanmar. Growing up in Yangon, the Shan ethnic people make this dish and vendors...
Ingredients: besan flour, salt, water
www.allrecipes.com
A fun party drink that is perfect for retro parties. Gelatin shots swimming in bubbly will amaze your friends, and they taste pretty good too!
Ingredients: water, vodka, bottle champagne
www.allrecipes.com
Thai desserts do not get more rustic and simple than this recipe of unhulled mung beans in a simple syrup of water and sugar.
Ingredients: skin, water, palm sugar
www.chowhound.com
Where the tonic water is actually the star.
Ingredients: gin, lime, tonic water
cooking.nytimes.com
Dick Bridges, a Maine lobsterman, gave this recipe to The Times in 2007, and we've adapted it here It's a stew that's both humble and luxurious, making it the perfect dish to serve for a late-fall or winter dinner party.