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This classic Italian-American comfort food works with any kind of sausage, but Chef John prefers the fennel and anise flavors of sweet Italian sausage with the beans.
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For the regal and expensive pork crown roast, Food and Wine's Test Kitchen Associate Melissa Rubel replaced the run-of-the-mill garlic-herb coating with a smoky harissa version. "I love the way it turns from a paste to a crispy crust,
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Anyone who has been to Pittsburgh can tell you about the wonderful Primanti Brothers sandwiches which are a local delicacy. Coleslaw, fries, cheese, and meat (or no meat for you veggies) on thickly sliced Italian bread brings a taste of Pittsburgh to wherever you may be. You can substitute your favorite meat for the capicola.
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Chicken, green chilies, tomatoes and garlic are combined in chicken broth and lime juice seasoned with cumin and cilantro in this spicy soup served with fried flour tortilla strips and shredded jack cheese.
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Simple yet delicious- cannellini beans and penne pasta mixed with chopped onion and fresh tomatoes.
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Cool yogurt and cucumbers combine in this tangy Greek tzatziki recipe.
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Pan-seared bison strip steaks are gussied up with a quick brandy-butter and shallot sauce.
cooking.nytimes.com
Aioli is the quintessential Provençal condiment, a pungent garlic mayonnaise that in its home country of France contains even more garlic than this version, which is still pretty garlicky It’s easy to make, and wonderful with all sorts of vegetables, like greens, steamed artichokes and asparagus
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Follow this authentic Italian recipe, and you'll have a bowl of creamy pasta with guanciale or pancetta ready in 30 minutes.
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In case you haven’t noticed, it’s zucchini season. It’s everywhere, it’s cheap and it’s plentiful. My garden is overrun with zucchini, what about you? Here’s...
cooking.nytimes.com
There may never be a better book title than “Aristocrat in Burlap,” a dramatic biography of the Idaho potato, from the first seedlings cultivated by Presbyterian missionaries in the 1840s (with considerable help from Native Americans) to the brown-skinned Burbanks that built today’s $2.7 billion industry The large size of Idaho potatoes — often 3 to 4 pounds each in the 19th century, nourished by volcanic soil and Snake River water — is the source of the mystique The Hasselback potato, named for the hotel in Stockholm where the recipe was invented in the 1950s, shows off the sheer mass of the Idaho potato like nothing else
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This lemony salad is so quick to make. Since the zucchini is served raw, be sure to use the smallest, freshest ones you can find. The salad can be garnished with pistachios, which add a little sweetness, or Italian pine nuts.