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cooking.nytimes.com
Panade is the French country cook's answer to stuffing — a satisfying and efficient way to use up stale bread. Because there are so few components, taking care to ensure that each one is just right will make all the difference in how the final dish tastes. Start with a stale, crusty loaf of sourdough bread Cook the onions slowly, until they're a deep caramel color, and then season them properly with vinegar and wine Buy good Gruyère and Parmesan, and grate it yourself
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Chicken piccata served over fettuccine is a quick Italian-inspired meal to prepare for weeknight dinners or gourmet dinner parties.
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Grilled halibut is served with a delicious Asian-style sauce featuring shallots, sesame oil, soy sauce, and rice wine.
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A German mulled red wine recipe with orange, lemon, spices, sugar, and a splash of brandy.
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This red wine punch recipe is a cross between sangría and a tropical rum cocktail--with Yellow Chartreuse and Grand Marnier.
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Scapece is one of the names of the classical way of preserving (mainly) fish and vegetables in vinegar. This dish is even better made a day in advance, as it...
cooking.nytimes.com
Though chefs these days get away with calling all sorts of grainy dishes risottos, the finished products often lack the creamy texture that makes classic risottos so appealing But that creamy texture is possible if whole grains are cooked separately and combined with some arborio rice, the traditional risotto rice Wild rice and corn contribute a New World character to this multicolored, multitextured risotto
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Get Stuffed White Mushroom Caps Recipe from Food Network
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Try this spicy, creamy sauce on Chef Donald Links's Grilled Pork Skewers.
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What could be better? White chocolate, cheesecake and blueberry topping!
cooking.nytimes.com
Slow-braising to infuse meats with deep flavor and produce warming, stew-like plates of food is a cooking method of choice when the weather brings a chill This chicken dish is the product of what I call the usual three-step affair (brown chicken, add other ingredients and some liquid, cover and slowly simmer) But I gave it a bit of heat, unpacking sake, ginger, garlic and the spicy Korean condiment gochujang, plus well-mannered slivers of poblano chilis into the pan
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Moira Hodgson and takes 2 1/2 to 3 hours, overnight marinating. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.