Search Results (7,049 found)
www.delish.com
Cooking a fish whole keeps the flesh especially moist and flavorfulnot to mention the drama an entire fish provides at serving time. Best of all, it couldnt be easier.
www.allrecipes.com
An easy salad to make with a bag of salad greens, pineapple, bacon bits, nuts and toasted coconut. Use fresh pineapple, if you can, and substitute toasted almonds for the macadamia nuts, if desired.
www.allrecipes.com
Nothing beats a good macaroni salad--except maybe one that's gluten free and with chunks of grilled chicken breast and chopped tomatoes.
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Taste a late summer harvest in a colorful pasta sauce that needs no cooking. Simply stir cooked corn, chopped tomatoes and sliced green onions into a dressing of olive oil, red wine vinegar and basil. Toss with hot pasta and sprinkle with Parmesan.
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This sparkling summertime punch is sweetened with frozen lemonade and slice citrus fruits.
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Originally this came from a Cuban friend, but I've since doctored it quite a bit. This dish is hearty and a meal in itself. By adding more meat, beans, and rice, you can feed a large group of people. You might want to add more spice as well.
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Chicken is marinated in what may be the perfect blend of wine and spices, then grilled to perfection!
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"My mom used to make this sun-dried tomato dip to spread on grilled cheddar sandwiches," says Michael White. He serves it with crudités.
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A wonderful, fresh, light way to serve chicken. Good over rice.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe was designed for new parents, who must cook stealthily to keep from waking an infant The silent chef must follow a few simple, yet unforgiving rules: any busy, attention-demanding work has to happen before baby's bedtime; recipes must easily tolerate a lengthy span between prep and finish, ideally resting at room temperature to lessen the mess and effort involved in refrigerating and reheating; and the final steps, after baby's bedtime, have to be both quiet and fairly routine.
cooking.nytimes.com
Here is a simple, excellent one-pot recipe for a midweek feast, full of rich flavor, with a sauce that you won't want to waste It came to The Times in 2014 via the Twitter account of Andrew Zimmern, the chef and globe-trotting television personality who thrills to home cooking when he's not at work, which is not often His then wife, Rishia Zimmern, adapted it from Martha Stewart, and he put it on the social network: “Brown 8 thighs, 3 C shallots
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Florence Fabricant and takes 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.