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Inspired by Japan's flavorful teriyaki sauces, this easy-to-make marinade combines soy sauce, ruby red grapefruit juice, hoisin sauce, ketchup, rice wine vinegar, brown sugar, ginger, garlic, and a zesty habanero chile pepper.
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Get Spicy Buffalo Style Stuffed Chicken Breasts Recipe from Food Network
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Vinegar and spices make these pickled eggs perfect for salads and party platters.
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Sliced pears, dried cranberries, Havarti cheese, pecans, and almonds makes this green salad go from simple to sensational.
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Get Veal Ragu with Campanelle Recipe from Food Network
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Get Lighter Creamy White Bean Dip Recipe from Food Network
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This peach shrub recipe infuses peaches with sugar, white wine vinegar, and basil to make a nonalcoholic flavoring for cocktails and mocktails.
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Make your own apricot jam with only three simple ingredients: apricots, lemon juice and sugar. Spread on a nice chunk of Italian bread for a sweet snack.
Ingredients: apricots, lemon juice, sugar
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Fresh herbs take plain risotto to new heights.
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This recipe came to The Times in 1994 via Paola di Mauro, an Italian grandmother who lived, cooked and made wine in Marina, a small suburban town some 12 miles southeast of Rome She was one of a band of cooks, mostly women, stretching back over generations, who have formed Italian cuisine, maintained its traditions and made it one of the world's most beloved and sought-after cooking styles Italians sometimes call it "cucina casalinga," roughly translated as "housewives' cooking." But with its intense concern for the quality of primary ingredients and its care to combine them in a judicious balance of flavors, it is much more than that
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This recipe is by Cathy Barrow and takes 1 hour 30 minutes. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.