Search Results (7,032 found)
www.allrecipes.com
For a beautiful, flavorful cold salad and a wonderful variation from the standards, try this easy and delicious couscous. Shrimp and tomatoes are tossed with couscous and feta cheese, then dressed in a garlic vinaigrette. Always a hit, and never goes to waste.
www.delish.com
This boldly flavored dish is enticing, especially to those with a taste for heat.
www.allrecipes.com
This is a terrific broth with caramelized roasted vegetables as a base. The veggies are then plopped into a pot with water and herbs and simmered until a rich, delicious broth emerges. Strain and you have two quarts broth. Freezes well.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Cabanal Breakfast Burrito Recipe from Food Network
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Cactus Salad Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
Pork slow-cooked with a mixture of reconstituted dried chile peppers, chicken stock, and canned white hominy combine for a simple way to make this traditional Mexican soup.
cooking.nytimes.com
This sauce is a tomato jam that tastes more like a richly spiced ketchup A long simmer is important This is inspired by a recipe for a delicious tomato jam in the chef Matthew Kenney’s cookbook, “Matthew Kenney’s Mediterranean Cooking.” My version is not as sweet as his; I decided to call it ketchup rather than jam because to me, it tastes like a richly spiced ketchup, with sweet and sour flavors and a little kick from the cayenne
www.simplyrecipes.com
Mexican style octopus salad, with tomatoes, green and red onion, cucumbers, and cilantro.
www.allrecipes.com
This simple, hearty stew consists of chicken and salt pork with potatoes, beans and other vegetables seasoned with Worcestershire sauce, salt and pepper.
www.allrecipes.com
A package of onion soup mix flavors the tomato broth in which six different vegetables are combined with shredded cabbage in this fat free, low-calorie soup.
cooking.nytimes.com
Given a choice, I always prefer white corn -- the sweetest and most tender you can find Although new hybrids make corn on the cob much hardier and longer-lasting than it used to be, I am still from the out-of-the-fields-and-into-the-pot school of corn cooking If you don't grow your own, try to find a farmer's market that sells fresh corn picked that morning.''
www.allrecipes.com
A surefire potluck hit, this spicy casserole is a healthier, baked version of beef chiles rellenos, with roasted poblano peppers and cheese!