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Feel like royalty while sipping this bubbly blackberry apéritif.
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A recipe passed to me from my great-grandmother, these cakes are light and not too sweet. The cardamom and rosewater give it a distinctive Persian flavor. These are best served with hot tea or coffee.
cooking.nytimes.com
When it comes to short ribs, you have choices Boneless short ribs are easier to serve to a crowd and can be substituted pound for pound in your grandmother’s time-honored brisket recipe Bone-in short ribs require a very large pot and are somewhat more awkward to plate
cooking.nytimes.com
Wheat berries sweetened with honey and perfumed with rose water and spices make a delicious breakfast on their own or stirred into yogurt (that’s the way I prefer to serve this) Whether you use farro, kamut, spelt or wheat berries (and whether you are cooking them for breakfast or for dinner) the trick here is to cook the grains for as long as it takes for them to really soften and to splay (that is, to burst at one end).
cooking.nytimes.com
These cookies are less sweet and chewier than many traditional nut macaroons The recipe is from Eileen Dangoor Khalastchy, an 86-year-old cook and baker who remembers her mother making something similar when the family lived in Iraq Ms
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An easy recipe for making your own flavored candy hearts with personalized captions for Valentine's Day.
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Salmon fillets are marinated in white miso, then broiled with a vibrant spinach sauce.
www.delish.com
If you've never cooked a whole duck, don't wait another day.
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Fact: Burgers are better with sweet-and-tangy onions glazed in balsamic vinegar.
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Kale is a marvelous green for salads because it's hearty enough to handle hefty ingredients like nuts and meat, plus it doesn't wilt as it sits on the table.
cooking.nytimes.com
Amanda Saab, a social worker and home cook who lives near Detroit, riffs on her Lebanese grandmother's recipe for namoura, a cake made from semolina flour, soaked in syrup while it's still warm When she serves it at iftar dinners during Ramadan, Ms Saab often doses the syrup with a little bit of lavender extract
cooking.nytimes.com
Almost any seasonal vegetable will lend itself to being pickled in a mix of apple cider vinegar and rice vinegar, tweaked with a little salt and sugar Use a mixture of what's in season, and choose small, slender vegetables when you can Whatever you choose, make sure to scrub vegetables well and peel away roots and thick skins.