Search Results (25,689 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
Danny Bowien, the chef and an owner of Mission Chinese Food in San Francisco and sometimes New York, wanted to have a Chinese version of Caesar salad on his menu The dish that he and Angela Dimayuga, his executive chef, came up with is not Chinese in the least Nor does it owe anything to Caesar save for a tin of anchovies
www.simplyrecipes.com
Cubed chicken sautéed in olive oil, served with pasta in a creamy sauce infused with thyme, mint, and honey.
www.allrecipes.com
This thin wheat cracker is simple and thrifty to make. It will taste great with any dip or spread, and they will have much more character than factory made crackers.
www.allrecipes.com
Primal- and paleo-friendly, this recipe for delicious almond butter fudge can also be easily adapted to make a fudge for all to enjoy!
www.allrecipes.com
These traditional crepes are made with eggs, milk, flour, salt and oil.
Ingredients: eggs, milk, flour, salt, vegetable oil
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Fried Plantain Chips Recipe from Food Network
www.delish.com
These crunchy chips are sprinkled with za'atar, the Middle Eastern spice blend made with sumac, sesame seeds, and dried herbs. Za'atar can also be rubbed on meat and vegetables or mixed into marinades.
Ingredients: pitas, olive oil, za atar, paprika
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Homemade Tortillas Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: flour, salt, vegetable oil, tap water
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Miso Noodles with Seared Ahi Tuna Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
At Spoon and Stable, his Minneapolis restaurant, Gavin Kaysen cooks a version of his grandmother Dorothy’s pot roast using paleron (or flat iron roast), the shoulder cut of beef commonly used in pot au feu, as well as housemade sugo finto, a vegetarian version of meat sauce made with puréed tomatoes and minced carrot, celery, onions and herbs This recipe uses a chuck roast and tomato paste, both easier to find and still delicious.
cooking.nytimes.com
In the 1950s, a Hollywood starlet was not expected to squander her talents (or risk her manicure) chopping onions But this recipe, scrawled by Marilyn Monroe on letterhead from an insurance company, suggested that she not only cooked, but cooked confidently and with flair It bears the mark of the Bay Area and influences of Italian cooking, possibly picked up from her marriage to Joe DiMaggio at San Francisco City Hall in 1954