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"When entertaining at home, I'm always hard-pressed for stove space," says Floyd Cardoz. To save room, he sears the meat in a preheated pan in the oven.
www.allrecipes.com
Onions, peppers and provolone cheese come together to make a great one pan supper. This is a simple and delicious recipe for a hot sandwich that is a snap to make, and sure to be a real crowd-pleaser.
www.delish.com
These enchiladas are the best excuse to stay home on a Friday night.
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Pork shoulder is a succulent cut that's best braised or roasted slowly, so it stays tender and juicy. The sweet-and-savory glazed pork here is terrific with or without the garlic-and-dried-apricot stuffing.
www.allrecipes.com
Carne guisada is a hearty Mexican-style beef stew. It is excellent with tortillas or cornbread, and is also great as a burrito filling.
www.simplyrecipes.com
Fall apart tender and smoky, barbecued pork shoulder, cooked low and slow on a 2-burner gas grill.
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This beef tenderloin is rubbed with a complex adobo paste made from three kinds of dried chiles.
www.simplyrecipes.com
Beef goulash with light, fluffy dumplings. Central European goulash, a beef stew with Hungarian paprika, onions, tomato paste, cubed chuck roast, herbs and stock.
www.allrecipes.com
Beef ribs treated with a chile powder rub and a tomato based sauce pack a real one-two wallop that will render your taste buds dazed and delighted!
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Really Slow Roast Pork Shoulder with Crispy, Crispy Crackling and Garlic Roast Potatoes Recipe from Food Network
www.delish.com
"On a recent trip to Southern France, I was taken with how the air smelled like herbes de Provence," says Food and Wine's Marcia Kiesel. The herbs in the famous blend are delicious with lamb.
cooking.nytimes.com
At the apogee of cooking in vino is this dish, which involves a whole beef roast As befits a thing that humans have been eating since before computers, before cars, before guns — perhaps before science itself — boeuf à la mode tastes less invented than it does discovered The best strategy is to cook it a day before you plan to serve it; it tastes better reheated than immediately, and the seasoning is most even and best distributed when it has time to spend in its rich broth.