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A flavorful basil mint pesto is tossed with fusilli and vegetables like asparagus and spinach in this Italian-inspired vegetarian dish.
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This recipe by Food Network star Giada de Laurentiis if full of bright root vegetable that offer up tons of flavor.
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Fresh rosemary, thyme, and garlic flavor these simple grilled burgers. Top them with Dijon mayo, tomato slices, and baby greens.
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A hearty and healthy fall or winter soup from the Spotted Pig's April Bloomfield, filled with celery root, potatoes, fennel, carrots, turnips, and parsnips.
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Baked turkey meatballs, made with 6 simple ingredients, are quick and easy to prepare and can be used in your favorite dish starring meatballs.
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Spinach, sun-dried tomato, and feta cheese are scrambled with eggs and wrapped in a warm tortilla to produce this delicious breakfast wrap.
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Baby spinach leaves, chopped cauliflower, toasted almonds and bacon bits are tossed with a creamy, sweet Parmesan dressing.
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Faced with two half-empty bottles of Zinfandel, F&W Test Kitchen supervisor Marcia Kiesel came up with this warm mulled wine, spiced with fennel seeds and cinnamon.
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The Romans make a classic dish in the spring with very young milk-fed lamb Such meat is hard to find in American supermarkets, but the technique, which involves a short braise in vinegar and water with a boost of anchovy at the end, works fine with chunks of lamb cut from a leg or roast of any young lamb This recipe is built on the precise technique for abbacchio alla cacciatora that Marcella Hazan offered in "The Classic Italian Cookbook," with some freshening up
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Perfect for breakfast or lunch, these wonderful pita bread sandwiches are filled with chicken sausage, roasted vegetables, and goat cheese.
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Use a prepared balsamic vinaigrette to dress this simple salad of baby greens, pecans, dried cherries, and Parmesan cheese.
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The cookbook author Madhur Jaffrey calls this "one of our most beloved family dishes, very much in the Hyderabadi style, where North Indian and South Indian seasonings are combined." Over the years, she has simplified the recipe "You can use the long, tender Japanese eggplants or the purple 'baby' Italian eggplants," she says, "or even the striated purple and white ones that are about the same size as the baby Italian ones Once cut, what you are aiming for are 1-inch chunks with as much skin on them as possible so they do not fall apart." Serve hot with rice and dal, or cold as a salad.