Search Results (2,720 found)
www.allrecipes.com
This satisfying paleo lasagna, loaded with sweet potato, ground beef, eggplant, zucchini, mushrooms, and marinara sauce, is baked for 1 hour.
cooking.nytimes.com
A classic Provençal beef daube, or slow-baked stew, is made with quantities of red wine, like the recipes that Julia Child often made in her house in Provence, La Pitchoune Patricia Wells, a former New York Times food writer in Paris, also lives part-time in the South of France, and she has adapted the daube for white wine, which plays a more subtle part in flavoring the stew The large amount of liquid makes a tender braise that can also be served as a sauce for pasta: penne, gnocchi and long noodles like tagliatelle are familiar in the region, which borders Italy on the east.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Petite Filet with Gorgonzola and Porcini Mushroom Sauce Recipe from Food Network
www.delish.com
In about 10 minutes, you can dish up this hot, wholesome egg breakfast, which features seasoned cream cheese and sauteed mushrooms.
Ingredients: olive oil, mushrooms, eggs, chive
www.delish.com
Using the mushroom-soaking liquid to cook the rice gives this risotto intense flavor. There's just enough goat cheese to balance the earthiness of the porcini with a touch of tartness without overwhelming the dish.
www.allrecipes.com
An unlikely ingredient -- carbonated orange soda -- makes this roasted duck, basted with orange sauce, easy and a little bit different for your holiday table.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Maura Egan and takes About 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
Ingredients: mushrooms, taleggio cheese
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Rabbit, Hunter-Style: Coniglio alla Cacciatora Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
This savory, well balanced risotto with dried chanterelles and Gorgonzola cheese works well as a main course.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Coq au Vin Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Just when I think all my recipe snipping and gluing and saving has been for naught, something turns me around Take this coffee-roasted beef with mushrooms and pasilla chili broth I couldn’t imagine why I had ever cut it out — so busy, so restauranty
cooking.nytimes.com
Every college has one: some kind of nasty-fantastic amalgam of cheese and meat and grease and bread and salt and melting awesomeness From freshman year to graduation, you can eat these things twice a week and it will hurt you, but not badly — that is the magic of youth and appetite and America combined After that, such a sandwich must be counted a special treat, and adapted to adult use