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This fresh chanterelle mushroom soup with wild rice, parsley, and dill makes for an elegant, savory meal that can be ready in under an hour.
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Stuffed artichokes are a perfect artichoke appetizer! Globe artichokes are trimmed and stuffed with herbed parmesan breadcrumb stuffing, then baked.
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This orange and grapefruit citrus salad with tangy feta cheese and toasted walnuts is a bright and fresh addition to a light summer meal.
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A recipe for the perfect matzo ball soup, with rich, long-simmered chicken broth and light, fluffy matzo balls.
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Get Chicken and Rice Paprikash Casserole Recipe from Food Network
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Three different types of cheese, plus sour cream and egg yolks, make this recipe especially rich.
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.
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Recipe for Jerk Pork Tenderloin, as seen in the March 2009 issue of 'O, The Oprah Magazine.'
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This ingenious, briny sauce couldn't be simpler: Chef René Redzepi purees raw oysters with a little of their liquor, plus rice vinegar and oil. He adds diced blanched vegetables for texture.
cooking.nytimes.com
Meat sauce is one of the recipes many American home cooks start with It seems so easy; brown some hamburger, pour in a jar of marinara, and presto Meat sauce
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The chicken stew here does have an authentic origin, but I have lightened it a little by dispensing with the cream that would be added luxuriously in its country of origin And you can cheerfully use a dry or semi-dry from anywhere in the world I have nothing against the regular coq au vin, but I might actually prefer this sprightlier version