Search Results (6,869 found)
www.allrecipes.com
Button mushrooms stuffed with crab and Monterey Jack cheese make a delicious bite-size appetizer. Your guests are sure to be dazzled!
www.allrecipes.com
This easy pork chop dish has a crunchy and delicious coating made with Parmesan cheese, sage, and lemon peel.
www.allrecipes.com
Vegetable juice replaces ketchup in this meatloaf recipe spiked with ranch dressing mix and garlic powder.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Swedish Meatballs with Spicy Plum Sauce Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
Fresh berries mix with quick custard for a super-easy, no-bake pie. This is good with any kind of berry–-try blueberries and halved strawberries, too.
www.allrecipes.com
Graham Cracker Crust with a creamy peanut butter layer, a chocolate pudding layer, and a whipped topping layer. Very good but also very rich!
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Baked Mashed Potatoes, with Pancetta, Parmesan Cheese, and Breadcrumbs Recipe from Food Network
www.delish.com
When capers hit hot oil, they puff up into crispy little blossoms with intense flavor and crunch.
www.chowhound.com
I got inspired to make salmon burgers and they came out great! It always feels good when you can make something new and have it turn out just the way you wanted...
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe for moussaka is adapted from one found in David Rosengarten's book “Taste” which includes an entire section devoted to the classic Greek casserole In the book, Mr Rosengarten claims that his is “the lightest, least oily, least tomatoey, most eggplanty, most refined moussaka that you've ever tasted.” Isn't that just what you want as you plan a dinner party
cooking.nytimes.com
When you get your hands on ice-cold oysters straight from the Chesapeake Bay, it would be foolish to do anything beyond shuck and slurp But in the 19th century, oysters were so plentiful in eastern Virginia and Maryland that they burrowed their way into the region's cooking traditions Most were smoked and salted, roasted over fire, dropped into chowders and stews and used in stuffings
cooking.nytimes.com
I have to thank a couple of people for this recipe: first, the chef Stevie Parle, of Dock Kitchen in London, who published the recipe to inspire this one, and second, the aunt of one of my recipe testers, who made such a standout interpretation that we all marveled over the leftovers the next day in the test kitchen I just had to try my own version, and here it is, made a touch more celebratory with caramelized walnuts and lashings of whipped cream, both of which can be omitted if you prefer keeping it plain and dairy-free (thereby making it suitable for Passover) The cake is moist and delicious enough as it is