Search Results (8,538 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
The best place for a salad on the Thanksgiving menu is at the beginning of the meal, before everybody fills up We often pass around plates of this vegetarian chopped salad (no bacon) to accompany the drinks before we sit down at the table The salad is a great mix of bitter and sweet flavors, juicy and crunchy, and comforting, too
www.allrecipes.com
Make your own salt-and-vinegar potato chips using the DIY recipe and just a handful of ingredients.
cooking.nytimes.com
In 2002, Mark Bittman published this revolutionary approach to roasting the Thanksgiving turkey, which allows you to cut the cooking time of the average turkey by about 75 percent while still presenting an attractive bird Simply cut out the backbone — or ask your butcher to do it for you — and spread the bird out flat before roasting, a technique known as spatchcocking that is commonly used with chickens Roasted at 450 degrees, a 10-pound bird will be done in about 45 minutes
Ingredients: turkey, garlic, tarragon, olive oil
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Bryan Miller and takes 2 hours. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Iceberg Lettuce Salad with Tangy Tomato-Tarragon "French" Dressing Recipe from Food Network
www.delish.com
This chicken dish is elegant enough for entertaining and easy enough for a simple weeknight dinner.
www.chowhound.com
Until recent times, tarragon enjoyed little or no esteem in most kitchens, being mostly regarded as a French quirk! A native of southern Europe, this herb prefers...
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Amanda Hesser and takes 5 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
cooking.nytimes.com
Mark Bittman writes that this bread stuffing, based on a James Beard recipe, has been a staple on his Thanksgiving table for decades First you make fresh bread crumbs: just whiz a few cups of slightly stale cubes of decent bread (crust and all, unless it’s super-hard) in a food processor Keep the crumbs very, very coarse
cooking.nytimes.com
Steven Satterfield, the chef at Miller Union in Atlanta, included this very French picnic recipe in his cookbook, "Root to Leaf." As he points out, the key is to use a lot of butter, a lot of radishes and plenty of salt The recipe yields four sturdy desk- or school-lunch sandwiches, or you can divide them further, into a dozen little bites for hors d’oeuvres.
Ingredients: baguette, butter, maldon, arugula, herbs
www.allrecipes.com
A tarragon infused vinegar and oil dressing with a smidgen of sugar, makes this classic spinach/bacon/egg salad just a bit different.