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This recipe breaks the taboo of combining seafood and cheese This salad of blanched shrimp, new potatoes and crisp disks of sugar-snap peas is perfectly adequate It is vibrant from fresh mint, tangy from red-wine vinegar and mustard in the vinaigrette, sweet from the shrimp and earthy from the potatoes, but a few shards of young pecorino add the saline funk that brings this dish together
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Get Zucchini and Ginger Naked Cake with Ginger Cream Cheese Frosting Recipe from Food Network
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Sweet and savory teriyaki sauce with sesame seeds and ground mustard powder flavor delicious broiled salmon steaks for a main dish that needs only a few minutes in the oven.
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Best Gingersnap Cookies ever! These ultra-thin gingersnap cookies are made with molasses and ground ginger, and baked until lightly browned and crispy.
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Get Shrimp, Mangos, and Papayas on Skewers with Mango Salsa Recipe from Food Network
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An excellent fragrant curry to eat either on its own or paired with Indian bread and rice.
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This recipe is by Amanda Hesser and takes 15 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Cashews and water chestnuts combine with chicken in this yummy and easy stir fry.
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Blend leftover watermelon with soju, ginger liqueur, and some lime juice for a refreshing summer cocktail recipe.
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Get Steak Fried Rice Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Chinese-style chicken is a dish you can find all over Trinidad and within the diaspora that has followed the nation’s emergence from British rule The skin is fried into a lacquered mahogany The meat beneath it tastes of five-spice, ginger and soy and is generally accompanied by a hum of oyster sauce mixed with the zing of the pickled Scotch-bonnet-pepper sauce that is seemingly omnipresent on the island’s tables.
cooking.nytimes.com
The pungent spices, zingy fresh ginger, dollops of tangy yogurt and fiery green chiles found in Indian cuisine tame the sugary beets in this recipe and open up a whole new universe of flavor In traditional Indian cooking, beets are usually boiled or steamed, then often made into vegetable curries or chutney But here they are roasted, which intensifies their sweetness.