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www.allrecipes.com
Once you try Chef John's recipe for olive oil-poached tuna with a hint of garlic and thyme you'll never want canned tuna again.
cooking.nytimes.com
Here is a recipe for a cold lobster appetizer or main course that Mark Bittman and I ginned up for a feast-in-a-day project for The Times’s Sunday Magazine in 2012 You boil the lobsters off and allow them to cool, then reduce the leftover stock to make a flavoring agent for mayonnaise Add some chopped lobster knuckles to that, and serve a dollop of it alongside the claw and tail meat, perhaps with herbs or a chopped salad
cooking.nytimes.com
I was once amazed to find I could use frozen red and yellow bell pepper strips straight from the package (I am aware that this is not a revelation to everyone; call me stupid.) The peppers are great in a simple quick dish of fried rice If frozen vegetables are handled expeditiously, they are often better than buying 'fresh' at the store." It's true
www.allrecipes.com
No butter, just oil in this recipe that delivers a rich, chewy, and chocolate-y cake in about an hour.
www.delish.com
A small amount of savory white miso paste gives New Englandstyle clam chowder a Japanese accent. Parsley oil adds flavor.
www.allrecipes.com
Olive oil cake with hints of lemon and vanilla is a moist and delicious dessert thanks to the olive oil added to the batter.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Oil Poached Flounder Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients: olive oil, flounder, lemons, parsley
cooking.nytimes.com
This is a fast, satisfying fish dinner with Cajun flavors Chad Shaner cooked it for staff meals when he was a line cook at Union Square Cafe in Manhattan It was, he said shyly when The Times talked to him in 2013, one of the restaurant staff's favorites
cooking.nytimes.com
This deeply moist ginger cake is adapted from David Lebovitz, the former pastry chef at Chez Panisse in Berkeley, Calif., who included the recipe in his cookbook, "Room for Dessert." It's the sort of cake that gets better – its flavors a bit more complex, its crumb a bit more tender – with time It's also incredibly easy to make, and it doesn't require any special equipment – just a bowl, a saucepan, a whisk and a cake pan Enjoy it with a cup of hot tea or a bit of bourbon (or both)
cooking.nytimes.com
This 2004 recipe draws its inspiration from Thailand, where Mark Bittman first sampled it The original was topped with shrimp, but his version uses scallops, “a slightly more unusual and elegant combination,” but don’t feel tied to just scallops: any grilled meat, poultry or fish work just as well here.
cooking.nytimes.com
This simplified version of the classic Mexican soup calls for storebought tortilla chips and employs the use of the broiler to char the chiles.
www.chowhound.com
Roasted walnut oil adds extra nutty flavor to this simple yet sophisticated dressing made with chives, white wine vinegar, and Dijon mustard.