Search Results (285 found)
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A tasty smoked egg sandwich with greens and Dijon mustard.
Ingredients: eggs, rye bread, butter
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A summer cocktail recipe of muddled apricots and mint mixed with rye whiskey and lemon juice
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Onions are caramelized and blended with paprika and rye bread in this delicious sauce. When we were little my Oma would serve this sauce over either pork or beef.
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Get Classic Manhattan Cocktail Recipe from Food Network
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This recipe is by Eric Asimov. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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This Sazerac cocktail recipe is a New Orleans favorite: rye whiskey, Peychaud’s Bitters, sugar, and absinthe, served neat with a lemon-peel twist.
Ingredients: sugar, rye whiskey, absinthe
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To streamline operations in the pastry kitchen at Diner in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, the restaurant’s pastry chef, Avery Wittkamp, devised an enormous solution, which can be easily adopted by home cooks She bakes this pie in a 10-inch springform pan, using a thicker, stretchable crust that can line the deep sides; it stays in place even when the pie is unmolded Impressively, the tall bark-brown crust rises over a filling as wide, majestic and mahogany-brown as a redwood tree
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This is a great multi-grain bread with a touch of honey and brown sugar. Quick and easy to prepare in a bread machine, it's our family favorite!
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This cocktail is part Mojito (in style) and part Julep (in taste), with basil replacing the mint for a distinct twist.
Ingredients: basil leaves, sugar, lemon juice, rye
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Wheat and rye flour, cocoa powder, and molasses are baked together creating a perfect pumpernickel bread. Serve with honey butter.
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This recipe is by Robert Simonson. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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American "deli rye" is descended from traditional breads in Middle and Eastern Europe, where rye and wheat grow together and "bread spice" (a combination of caraway, coriander, anise and fennel seeds) is common This kind of rye bread spread across the United States in the 20th century along with Jewish delicatessens, where it served as the perfect foil for rich fillings like pastrami and chopped liver -- not to mention tuna melts The sour tang and chewy texture of the original breads have largely been lost over time, because rye bread today is made mostly from wheat flour and just a scant amount of rye