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Thinly sliced pork is stir-fried with ginger, daikon radish, sake, and mirin in this easy Japanese weeknight dish that's full of flavor.
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Many cuisines have some version of a starchy vegetable stuffed, then fried, but the corviches of Ecuador speak to tropical and African influences in a delicious way; the plantains give them great crunch and a mild sweetness, while the peanuts offer an intriguing toasted, buttery taste Stuffed here with quickly stewed tuna, they're great as appetizers or as a light meal when paired with a salad.
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Filipino soul food combines oxtails, eggplant, and green beans in a peanut sauce. Serve over hot cooked rice.
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This is a very basic recipe for homemade beef bone broth. The broth can easily be frozen for later use but should be consumed within 6 months.
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Classic French toast gets kicked up a notch with the addition of Buffalo wing sauce and Parmesan cheese in this savory French toast recipe.
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Get Sesame-Pecan Chicken Strips Recipe from Food Network
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Beets, beet greens, potatoes, and celery root are simmered together in this hearty, traditional Polish beet soup recipe.
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This is inspired by Wolfgang Puck’s signature smoked salmon pizza, and it’s a great way to work more salmon, rich in omega-3 fats, into your diet The trick here is to bake the lavash just until the edges are crisp, but not so long that it’s too crisp all the way through to cut easily.
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Hawaiian oxtail soup with oxtails, slowly cooked to produce their own broth, with ginger, anise, orange peel, peanuts, chili, mustard greens, onions, and cilantro.
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Mini buffalo chicken sandwiches will be a welcome addition to your next cook-out.
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A great answer to that eternal question — “What do I do with all these apples?” — apple butter is a sweetened, concentrated, lightly spiced spread that’s smoother than jam and thicker than applesauce and fantastic on buttered toast, thinned with vinegar as a sauce for pork chops, or used to top breakfast treats like pancakes, waffles or biscuits The apples here are intentionally left unpeeled and uncored to take advantage of the extra flavor in the peels and pectin-rich cores (A pass through a food mill or sieve after cooking will pull them out.) As for the ideal apple butter apple — well, there is none