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A simple and dense fruitcake that doesn't contain eggs or nuts.
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This recipe is by Jennifer Steinhauer and takes 1 hour 10 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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The herb roasted pheasant with wild rice stuffing recipe is from the 2009 Inaugural Luncheon is courtesy of Design Cuisine.
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Applesauce bran muffins are an easy way to eat bran cereal and are quick and easy to prepare for breakfast or a snack.
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These vegan sausage patties are treated to a tamari-garlic reduction and a mix of dried herbs and spices. Make ahead for an easy breakfast!
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This recipe is by Elaine Sciolino and takes 1 hour and 10 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Condensed potato, shrimp and oyster soups are heated with cream, thyme and white pepper for an easy seafood soup.
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This dinner recipe calls for pan-fried chicken to simmer in a sauce with garlic, Marsala wine, basil, and rosemary.
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All you really need for this dish is Aburrio Rice, onion, broth and some butter. Though it helps if you have some white wine, parmesan cheese, and a veggie or...
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During Nowruz, the Persian New Year, it's traditional to eat fish, a symbol of life This version, adapted from the chef Hanif Sadr, is stuffed with bij, a mixture of chopped herbs, walnuts and pomegranate molasses that forms the base of many northern Iranian dishes After a short turn in a hot oven, the fish emerges with crisp, brown skin
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Get Coconut Bones Recipe from Food Network
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Dongbei cai is the food of Northeast China Weiliang Chen, the chef at Northeast Taste Chinese Food, the biggest of the Dongbei restaurants in Queens, makes an elegant, tender version of a popular Dongbei stir-fry of lamb with dried chilies, made fragrant and crunchy with cumin seeds — a legacy of the nomadic Mongols who long ruled Central Asia, carrying spices on horseback along with their arrows Lamb is considered a Northern taste and excessively “strong” by many Chinese cooks; it is always cooked with powerful aromatics, like chili peppers and garlic, to subdue it.