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Hulled yellow mung beans make a very rustic, sweet, and hearty porridge served under salted coconut cream.
Hulled yellow mung beans make a very rustic, sweet, and hearty porridge served under salted coconut cream.
www.delish.com
Chock-full of lima beans, corn and chunks of catfish, this Creole-seasoned stew is a Southern delight. The heat level is moderate, but you can increase the spiciness by adding more Tabasco sauce or a bit of cayenne pepper.
Chock-full of lima beans, corn and chunks of catfish, this Creole-seasoned stew is a Southern delight. The heat level is moderate, but you can increase the spiciness by adding more Tabasco sauce or a bit of cayenne pepper.
Ingredients:
cooking oil, onion, celery, green bell pepper, thyme, oregano, dry mustard, tabasco sauce, black pepper, salt, dry white wine, tomatoes, chicken broth, lima beans, corn kernels, catfish, parsley
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Elaine Louie and takes 1 hour. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
This recipe is by Elaine Louie and takes 1 hour. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
Ingredients:
silken tofu, soy sauce, sugar, sambal oelek, sherry vinegar, sesame oil, canola oil, beans, vegetable oil, cornstarch, tofu, sesame seeds
www.delish.com
This dish grew out of a trip to a summer farmers' market, where I couldn't resist the yellow wax beans and red radishes. Poaching is a wonderful way to cook salmon without any added fat.
This dish grew out of a trip to a summer farmers' market, where I couldn't resist the yellow wax beans and red radishes. Poaching is a wonderful way to cook salmon without any added fat.
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Eastern Style Tuna Nicoise Salad with Tea Marbled Eggs and Wasabi Vinaigrette Recipe from Food Network
Get Eastern Style Tuna Nicoise Salad with Tea Marbled Eggs and Wasabi Vinaigrette Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients:
mirin, ginger, soy sauce, tuna steaks, wasabi, juice, olive oil, brown sugar, peanut oil, green beans, mixed greens, cherry tomatoes, quail eggs, romaine lettuce, capers, olives, star anise
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Get Super Tuna Recipe from Food Network
Get Super Tuna Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients:
albacore tuna, cannellini beans, cloves, onion, hummus, carrot, olives, gherkin pickles
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Tangy tamarind is the base in this traditional Filipino pork broth.
Tangy tamarind is the base in this traditional Filipino pork broth.
cooking.nytimes.com
In this elegant variation of the classic French salad, seared fresh tuna stands in for the conventional canned sort The rest of the salad can be assembled a few hours ahead, but the tuna should be cooked and placed on top of the salad just before it is served.
In this elegant variation of the classic French salad, seared fresh tuna stands in for the conventional canned sort The rest of the salad can be assembled a few hours ahead, but the tuna should be cooked and placed on top of the salad just before it is served.
Ingredients:
potatoes, dijon mustard, cloves, red wine vinegar, olive oil, salt, pepper, water, string beans, yellow pepper, tomatoes, red onions, nicoise, tuna, canola oil, lettuce, basil leaves
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Get Vegetarian Ribollita Recipe from Food Network
Get Vegetarian Ribollita Recipe from Food Network
Ingredients:
olive oil, onion, rib celery, zucchini, carrots, cloves, rosemary, savoy cabbage, tomatoes, basil leaves, marjoram, cannellini beans, vegetable broth, sourdough bread, baby spinach, pecorino romano
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Get Broccoli Melts Recipe from Food Network
Get Broccoli Melts Recipe from Food Network
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Get Cacio E Pepe Gnocchi Recipe from Food Network
Get Cacio E Pepe Gnocchi Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
In 2007, if you were looking for a sign of the culinary times, you could do no better than the one prominently displayed in San Francisco, in my local Übermarket for the conscientious shopper: “Organic Summer Squash, $3.99 a pound.” Our growing food fetishization created a new produce category: luxury squash I was disturbed but also intrigued: perhaps familiarity had blinded me to squash’s delicate charms — at these prices it clearly deserved more than a typically bland sauté or a quick turn on the grill Given its etymology (the word “squash” comes from a Native American word meaning “eaten raw”), maybe it shouldn’t be cooked at all
In 2007, if you were looking for a sign of the culinary times, you could do no better than the one prominently displayed in San Francisco, in my local Übermarket for the conscientious shopper: “Organic Summer Squash, $3.99 a pound.” Our growing food fetishization created a new produce category: luxury squash I was disturbed but also intrigued: perhaps familiarity had blinded me to squash’s delicate charms — at these prices it clearly deserved more than a typically bland sauté or a quick turn on the grill Given its etymology (the word “squash” comes from a Native American word meaning “eaten raw”), maybe it shouldn’t be cooked at all