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cooking.nytimes.com
Forget all the bad, soggy oatmeal cookies you’ve ever had in your life Picture instead a moist-centered, butterscotch-imbued, crisp-edged cookie flecked with nubby oats Add to this the fragrant nuttiness of toasted coconut
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Get Chicken Fingers With Curried Ketchup Recipe from Food Network
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Churro-fy your breakfast! 😏
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Spice up a Classic Pound Cake recipe with fragrant cinnamon and raisins.
cooking.nytimes.com
These ice cream sandwiches make a perfect summertime treat The thin brownie cake layer bakes quickly, which is a bonus on hot days, and the filling need not be homemade Freezing time can vary so be sure to plan ahead
cooking.nytimes.com
This pancake is similar to a recipe that ran in The Times in 1966 called David Eyre’s pancake, named for a man whose fame seems to rest mainly on this tasty invention Here, in addition to the corn kernels I wanted to use up, I stirred in some cornmeal to highlight the corn factor Because cornmeal can make things heavy and I feared the pancake might become too dense, I increased the number of eggs in the batter to help it rise and puff
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Get American-Style Potato Salad Recipe from Food Network
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Get Raspberry Cream Cupcakes Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Tunisian frittatas are sometimes baked in an earthenware dish in the oven, sometimes on top of the stove This one, adapted from a recipe by Clifford Wright, is made like an Italian frittata, but the spices are unmistakably Tunisian.
cooking.nytimes.com
This simple, rustic cake is perfect for a holiday celebration or any other occasion.
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Get Lemon Pecan Slab Pie Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Poundcake is like brownies: a baker's challenge that sounds like child's play The name itself is traditionally half the recipe – a pound each of butter, eggs, sugar and flour – but the technique is critical to producing a cake that is so tender it can stand alone but is still sturdy enough to hold up under a fruit compote, ice cream or sauce This recipe, adapted from Joseph Murphy, a pastry chef at Gotham Bar and Grill, calls for melting the butter first, beating the eggs and sugar together until they are very thick, then whisking in the flours and the butter