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Add Mexican flair to this classic appetizer dish with avocado, cilantro, and Mexican hot sauce.
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This recipe for pumpkin spice cupcakes is loaded with pumpkin and warm spices and can be topped with pumpkin–cream cheese frosting.
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Creole seasoning adds a Cajun twist on the classic chicken Alfredo in this quick and easy pasta recipe great for dinner on a busy weeknight.
cooking.nytimes.com
This is a lamb dish done schnitzel-style, devised as a pairing for blaufränkisch wine from Austria Ask your butcher to pound slices of top round of lamb, from the leg, only lightly, which will result in pieces that are about a half-inch thick, providing enough tolerance so the meat can brown without overcooking Refrigerating the coated slices before frying them helps, too
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Jean-Georges Vongerichten recommends a wood-burning oven with a stone floor when baking the perfect pizza.
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Get Choco-Chunky Banana Bread Recipe from Food Network
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This rémoulade sauce (that goes particularly well with these crab cakes) is not the classic French version, which is made with mayonnaise, cornichons and capers, but rather a French Creole type This one has paprika, horseradish, garlic and - what could be more all-American - ketchup.
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Not classy but insanely tasty.
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This flan, when inverted, rests on a rich chocolate cake layer and is topped with melted caramel.
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Eric Asimov brought this recipe to The Times in 1998, part of a round-up of some of the specialty sandwich shops cropping up in Manhattan at the time “Sandwiches are as American as Dagwood Bumstead,” he wrote, “and outlandishness has always been part of the recipe.” The new combinations he wrote about went well beyond the ham and cheeses, tuna salads and pastrami on ryes of the past This recipe, adapted from Sandbox, a small chain, elevates the classic chicken salad, with Madras curry powder and slow-roasted tomatoes deepening its savory qualities, and the walnut-raisin bread adding a bit of sweetness and bite.
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Get Galettes Sucrees Recipe from Food Network
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What I have come to understand is that how food looks as you prepare it can make as much difference to the cook as it does, on the plate, to the person who gets to eat it When the skies are drab and life feels a little gray, I am absurdly cheered by the fresh brightness of a vibrantly orange dal, a red lentil stew spiced with turmeric, chili and ginger, and colored with sweet potatoes and tomatoes Just seeing that mixture in the pan lifts my spirits