Search Results (3,638 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe for Cincy's classic chili is an adaptation of one found in the International Chili Society's ''Official Chili Cookbook'' by Martina and William Neely In this version, unsweetened chocolate adds depth, and a splash of vinegar lends a pleasant tang that cuts through the richness Craig Claiborne and Pierre Franey brought it to The Times in 1981, and we've updated it here to include the traditional "five-way" serving suggestion: over cooked spaghetti sprinkled with grated cheddar cheese, kidney beans and diced white onion.
www.simplyrecipes.com
Baked Cherry French Toast Casserole! This is an easy make-ahead breakfast casserole starring juicy, sweet cherries and a crunchy cinnamon sugar topping.
cooking.nytimes.com
The vegetarian cookbook author Lukas Volger has a way with Asian condiments and flavors In this recipe for bibimbap, the egg-topped Korean rice bowl, he roasts squash, shiitakes and broccoli rabe in a sweet and spicy mix of soy, chile paste, sugar and oil Mr
cooking.nytimes.com
In Turkey, okra is often stewed with lamb or chicken I liked this dish so much that I made it twice in one week, the second time for a big dinner party It’s adapted from Ghillie Basan’s recipe in “Classic Turkish Cooking.”
www.chowhound.com
Sometimes, a cook wants a day off. I recently had a morning of nothingness. It was a day meant for relaxing, watching a movie or a cooking show. Later in the...
cooking.nytimes.com
Chicken, cauliflower, olives, tomatoes, feta — this is a stew of extraordinary flavor and complexity, down to its hints of cinnamon and garlic The recipe uses skinless chicken legs or thighs; you could substitute ones with the skin if you like (But don’t use chicken breasts, which will dry out.) You can use more or less chicken depending on your needs
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Zucchini Salad Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
In 1975, Craig Claiborne, then editor of The Times' food department, shared his favorite childhood dish with readers “A few weeks ago we were interviewed on the McCanns' At Home Program on station WOR, and when the subject veered around to childhood foods, we described in some detail the dish that had given us most pleasure in early youth and adolescence and still gives us comfort as we approach senility. It was a family creation known as chicken spaghetti It consisted of spaghetti or spaghettini and sometimes vermicelli baked in a casserole, layered with a tomato and cream sauce, a meat sauce, boneless chicken and two kinds of grated cheese. It was almost always served when large numbers were invited for special occasions. Subsequent to the program we received numerous requests for the recipe and discovered with some astonishment that we had somehow never had occasion to use it in a story.”