Search Results (28,693 found)
www.allrecipes.com
Make your own garlic bread with this quick and easy recipe that will be a welcome addition to your dinner table.
Ingredients: butter, garlic, basil, salt, french bread
www.allrecipes.com
The pumpkins are carved, the pies are all baked, and you have a bunch of pumpkin seeds just waiting to be turned into a sweet, spicy snack. Here's your recipe.
cooking.nytimes.com
Homemade marinara is almost as fast and tastes immeasurably better than even the best supermarket sauce — and it's made with basic pantry ingredients All the tricks to a bright red, lively-tasting sauce, made just as it is in the south of Italy (no butter, no onions) are in this recipe Use a skillet instead of the usual saucepan: the water evaporates quickly, so the tomatoes are just cooked through as the sauce becomes thick
www.allrecipes.com
This browned onion and mushroom kugel made with matzo crackers is a favorite dish during Passover.
www.chowhound.com
A quick pickling yields tangy, tasty results with no cocktail sauce needed.
www.allrecipes.com
This centerpiece-worthy lamb is marinated in a pomegranate molasses, rosemary, garlic, and mint mixture. Glaze with more pomegranate molasses after roasting.
www.chowhound.com
This Momofuku chicken wings recipe from David Chang covers crispy chicken wings in a sweet-spicy sauce.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Soft Pretzels Recipe from Food Network
www.chowhound.com
A recipe for lean and healthy pork tenderloins that are grilled with an easy and flavorful spice rub made with coffee and smoked paprika.
www.allrecipes.com
Pretzels with a bite! This snack is shaken, not baked. Lemon pepper is the secret ingredient, and gives the spice marinade mixture a wonderful zest.
www.allrecipes.com
This whole wheat pie crust recipe uses the secret ingredient of wheat gluten to produce a nice crispy crust perfect for any pie or quiche.
cooking.nytimes.com
If you’ve bought a loaf of truly fantastic panettone, made in the Italian tradition from a natural starter, the kind that’s airy and melting, we hope you don’t have any leftovers But if you find yourself with an excess of mass-produced panettone, or simply very old panettone that’s past its prime, here’s how to transform it into something special Cut it into thick slices, as the pastry chef Elisabeth Prueitt does with brioche, when she makes her bread pudding at Tartine Bakery in San Francisco
Ingredients: butter, panettone, eggs, sugar, salt, milk