Search Results (16,518 found)
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Blueberry Pie Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
This straightforward recipe for apple pie is from the vegan chef and cookbook author Chloe Coscarelli It calls for storebought crusts, so you really can throw it together and have it in the oven in about 15 minutes.
Ingredients: sugar, flour, cinnamon, apples, pie crusts
cooking.nytimes.com
This makes a large batch of dough Divide it in half and use both halves, or freeze one portion to use another time.
Ingredients: butter, milk, flour, superfine sugar, salt
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Crunchy Shrimp Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: flour, sugar, shrimp, panko, soybean oil
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Basic Crepes Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: flour, eggs, milk, club soda, butter
www.simplyrecipes.com
This butter pecan cookie recipe makes absolutely delicious cookies.
Ingredients: pecans, butter, sugar, vanilla, salt, flour
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Chef Rick's Classic French Bread Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: bread flour, salt, honey, water, yeast
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Yorkshire Puddings Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: beef drippings, flour, milk, water, eggs
www.allrecipes.com
This simple flatbread gets its tang from yogurt. It's best served warm.
Ingredients: yeast, sugar, salt, water, yogurt, flour
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Baked Baguettes Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: yeast, sugar, water, salt, bread flour
cooking.nytimes.com
I love to sprinkle nigella seeds over the tops of these fragrant buns — they look great and the savory nigella contrasts well with the sweet dough (Sesame seeds would work, too.) Clotted cream is the perfect accompaniment, but if you can’t find it, crème fraîche or mascarpone would also be lovely — whether at breakfast or teatime.
cooking.nytimes.com
This savory French-Canadian meat pie combines ground pork and warm spices with chunks of braised pork shoulder and shreds of chicken or turkey But you could make it with leftover brisket, with venison, with smoked goose or ham Traditionally it is served with relish or tart, fruity ketchup — I like this recipe for cranberry ketchup best, though I use a splash of fresh orange juice instead of the concentrate it calls for. “I’ve never had a slice of tourtière and spoonful of ketchup and not liked it,” David McMillan, the bearish chef and an owner of Joe Beef in the Little Burgundy section of Montreal, told me