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www.delish.com
Sautéed mushrooms can make almost any inexpensive red wine taste better!
cooking.nytimes.com
This tart, adapted from the pastry chef Jacquy Pfeiffer, with whom I wrote a cookbook, is a very simple way to show off the last of the season’s plums Use the same formula for peaches, apricots and figs when those fruits are in season The important thing to remember when making fresh fruit tarts with cut stone fruit is that you need to pack the fruit into the pastry tightly
www.allrecipes.com
Here's how we take a tuna melt from good to great: open-faced with crusty toasted bread, melty cheese, capers, cornichons, Dijon mustard, and plenty of seasoning. On a chilly fall day, nothing tastes better.
www.delish.com
In this risotto-like dish, the pressure cooker's intense heat penetrates the pine nuts' outer membranes and makes them soft inside.
www.simplyrecipes.com
Chicken prosciutto! with boneless, skinless chicken breasts with butter toasted sage, wrapped in prosciutto.
cooking.nytimes.com
This extraordinary sandwich, served at Frankies Spuntino in New York, is crisp and tender, lightly oily in a good way, and filled with salty pungent flavor — and the secret to its goodness is in the technique used to fry the vegetable And now you can make it at home It’s not a sandwich to make on a whim
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Baked Ziti Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
Here's a hearty stew to feed a hungry crowd--it features a colorful array of beans simmering with sausage and chicken broth that slow cooks for hours, leaving you free to enjoy the day.
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Get Trout With Sausage Gravy Recipe from Food Network
www.allrecipes.com
Oklahoma style spicy beer and tomato-vegetable juice drink.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Nancy Harmon Jenkins and takes 1 hour 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
cooking.nytimes.com
A classic crumbler like Vermont Creamery’s fresh goat cheese can be swirled into a creamy tomato bisque just before serving, enriching the soup and preserving the occasional lemony crumb