Search Results (26,507 found)
www.delish.com
Beef sirloin is threaded onto kabobs with mushrooms and green pepper, then grilled with an herb-seasoned basting sauce.
www.allrecipes.com
The secret ingredient? Steak sauce. The creamy part? Mayonnaise and sour cream. The end result is a delicious garlic- infused dressing that would be perfect topping a salad of grilled beef or chicken.
www.delish.com
This dish of fresh zucchini is balanced by soft, ripe Taleggio and roasted marcona almonds.
www.allrecipes.com
Great for dinner parties, this colorful and flavorful dish is inspired by southern Indian cooking. Potatoes, cauliflower florets, and red lentils combine with onions, garlic, curry powder, ginger, tomatoes, malt vinegar, and chutney.
www.allrecipes.com
A spicy sauce of tomatillos and plenty of cilantro makes this simple chicken dish an extra special. Leave the jalapeno seeds and ribs intact if you want a little more heat.
www.chowhound.com
This easy roasted pork tenderloin recipe first sears the pork on the stovetop and then roasts it in the oven with figs and pears to serve on the side.
cooking.nytimes.com
Dongbei cai is the food of Northeast China Weiliang Chen, the chef at Northeast Taste Chinese Food, the biggest of the Dongbei restaurants in Queens, makes an elegant, tender version of a popular Dongbei stir-fry of lamb with dried chilies, made fragrant and crunchy with cumin seeds — a legacy of the nomadic Mongols who long ruled Central Asia, carrying spices on horseback along with their arrows Lamb is considered a Northern taste and excessively “strong” by many Chinese cooks; it is always cooked with powerful aromatics, like chili peppers and garlic, to subdue it.
www.allrecipes.com
This one-pot Japanese curry tastes better the longer it stews, as the sauce, with hints of Worcestershire and ketchup, seeps into the beef and vegetables.
www.chowhound.com
This simple, healthy variation on the French classic soupe au pistou trades summer produce for winter cellar staples like parsnips, turnips, and celery root.
cooking.nytimes.com
This dish turns the proportion of fish to vegetables on its head -- more vegetables, less fish There's enough shrimp and squid to let you know you're eating a fish stew, but enough chickpeas and spinach to let you know it is something different A puttanesca-like seasoning of garlic, olives, capers, anchovies and tomato paste flavors the braise.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Moira Hodgson and takes 1 hour 45 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.