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Sour cream based horseradish sauce. A great addition to steak or pork roast, and easy to make!
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Traditional broccoli salad with the addition of red grapes, bacon, and sunflower seeds is a nice combination of sweet and savory and perfect for summer picnics.
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
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This recipe is by Barbara Kafka and takes 25 minutes plus weighting and refrigeration time (8-12 hrs). Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Farro cooked with onions and garlic and tossed with sautéed swiss chard and radicchio
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The Roasted New Potato Salad With Olives exemplifies an amazingly quick - cooking technique. Instead of roasting the potatoes in a preheated oven, start them in a cold oven and roast them as the oven heats. Cooked this way, they brown nearly twice as fast.
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A hearty side with unusual spices.
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A version of this delicious Jewish-Middle Eastern chicken dish, adapted from Joan Nathan's cookbook "King Solomon's Table," dates to medieval times You can make it in one day, but it's best to make the chicken a day ahead, then it refrigerate it overnight and remove the layer of fat that rises to the top (If you choose to make it all in one day, you may want to use a fat separator to strain the sauce before serving.) For more heat, add a little hot paprika or cayenne.
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Get Pork Belly Adobo Recipe from Food Network
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Get Portuguese Fish Supper Recipe from Food Network
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There are lots of diced veggies that give this salad its flavor, color, and name. Red bell pepper to diced green onion. And a few generous splashes of hot pepper sauce give it some zip. Tuna never had it so good. Serves four.
cooking.nytimes.com
Bone-in lamb shanks are perfect for braising The marrow in the bones releases into the sauce, deepening its flavor, while the tough meat softens into perfect tenderness during the long, slow cooking In this recipe (very loosely based on a Georgian stew called chakapuli) the shanks are cooked with a prodigious amount of fresh herbs, adding fragrance and body