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A creamless puréed soup that makes an elegant fall meal.
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That's what I call YUMMY COMFORT food! To make it a bit richer I saute one large onion in 5 tablespoons of butter sprinkled with one tablespoon of brown sugar till caramelized. Then add to soup at the end with shrimp
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A very pale green springtime cousin of vichyssoise, this purée is comforting when served hot, refreshing when cold.
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Get Chicken Stock Recipe from Food Network
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Marinated strips of pork loin are stir fried with cabbage, celery, garlic, and vermicelli pasta.
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This recipe is by Jane Sigal and takes 45 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
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Get Healthy One-Skillet Shrimp and Quinoa Recipe from Food Network
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In 2011, Jeff Gordinier wrote about Gradisca, in the West Village, where the owner Massimo Galeano wanted to serve the dishes of his Bolognese childhood So he brought in his mother, Caterina Schenardi This recipe is adapted from her and Daniele Boldrini, who grew up in Bologna
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Get Ciabatta Stuffing with Chestnuts and Pancetta Recipe from Food Network
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Vegetables and rice are wok-fried with sesame oil, chiles, and other seasonings in this flavorful side dish.
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At Spoon and Stable, his Minneapolis restaurant, Gavin Kaysen cooks a version of his grandmother Dorothy’s pot roast using paleron (or flat iron roast), the shoulder cut of beef commonly used in pot au feu, as well as housemade sugo finto, a vegetarian version of meat sauce made with puréed tomatoes and minced carrot, celery, onions and herbs This recipe uses a chuck roast and tomato paste, both easier to find and still delicious.
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In the 1950s, a Hollywood starlet was not expected to squander her talents (or risk her manicure) chopping onions But this recipe, scrawled by Marilyn Monroe on letterhead from an insurance company, suggested that she not only cooked, but cooked confidently and with flair It bears the mark of the Bay Area and influences of Italian cooking, possibly picked up from her marriage to Joe DiMaggio at San Francisco City Hall in 1954