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cooking.nytimes.com
Summer is the season of stone fruit — juicy cherries, sweet peaches, perfect plums Add a little mint and honey and you’ve got an amazing summer salad that is a turn away from the usual melon-heavy versions popular on picnic tables and at barbecues.
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The trio of mint, basil and cilantro, along with tangy-sweet seasoned rice vinegar, gives this refreshing salad its Thai orientation. Instead of white rice, use...
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Learn to make the original Mai Tai: premium aged rum, lime, orange curaçao, and orgeat. While this recipe takes less than five minutes to put together, we recommend...
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Get Grilled Skirt Steak with Salsa Verde and Fresh Chick Pea Salad Recipe from Food Network
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Quick, easy and very zesty, my whole family just loves this pasta dish!
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Get Dipped and Decorated Waffle Cones Recipe from Food Network
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Get Grilled Scallops with Grilled Pineapple Salsa Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
A baked lamb and rice dish I tasted in Istanbul, etli pilav, inspired this one-pot meal, topped with walnuts and fresh mint and pomegranate seeds Similar pilaf-style rice dishes are made all across the Middle East and into Asia Kabuli pulao in Afghanistan is acclaimed; the Persian baghali polov ba gusht is justly famous, as is the Lebanese Hashwet al-ruz; and there are myriad fabled biryanis made with lamb (or goat) in India and Pakistan
cooking.nytimes.com
Brian Bistrong, the chef of the clubby TriBeCa restaurant the Harrison, ushers in spring with lamb cooked to a perfect pink and fork-mashed peas that have been simmered in pan drippings and tossed with torn mint leaves Add a pile of potatoes roasted with rosemary and garlic for a meal that couldn't be more simple, or sublime And if your carving skills are shaky, practice on a cantaloupe.
cooking.nytimes.com
This easy, beautiful purée makes a nice Thanksgiving opener, with the added benefit of extra doses of vitamin A, vitamin C, potassium and fiber If you’re looking to get ahead with your meal, you can make this dish up to two days ahead of the big day.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Alice Hart and takes 35 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
cooking.nytimes.com
At his Succotash restaurants, Edward Lee serves this dish with pickled scuppernongs, a Southern variety of grape You can serve it as is or add pickled red grapes or fresh, halved grapes for a punch of sweetness.