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This American classic can be a perfect dish: big-tasting, filling, nutritious, easy and very possibly vegetarian With their rich natural broth, turtle beans do not need bacon, ham or any meat ingredient to make a satisfying soup Black bean soup recipes have a tendency to turn out sludgy or bland, but the trick here is to season generously, and purée sparingly
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Get Lentil and Rice Salad Recipe from Food Network
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Pairing spicy chilis and sweet mango in salsa is a classic Here's a twist on a chicken sauté, spiked with plenty of black pepper, a little rum and mangoes folded in at the end to brighten the mix.
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Get Linguine and Prosciutto Frittatas Recipe from Food Network
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This easy chicken and ginger clay pot recipe uses a flavorful marinade, then braises the chicken to yield supertender meat.
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Roasting the vegetables first brings deep, rich flavor to this sage-brown butter butternut squash soup--perfect for a chilly fall day.
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Originally written during the Italian Renaissance, this ravioli recipe called for a hog's tripe or calf's head filling. To modernize the dish, culinary historian Cathy Kaufman substitutes shiitake mushrooms, which have a similar texture to tripe, but a mo
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In this Provençal rendition of pan-cooked chicken breasts, the mushrooms take on and added dimension of flavor as they deglaze the pan with the help of one of their favorite partners, dry white wine.
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Get Crusty Baked Shells & Cauliflower Recipe from Food Network
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A low-carb alternative to pasta, this dish features roasted spaghetti squash stuffed with ground turkey, asparagus, tomatoes, basil, onion, and garlic.
cooking.nytimes.com
The childhood pleasure of tomato soup with a side of grilled cheese had been enshrined in my mind since I’d last had it, decades ago A tart, bright tomato soup and a crispy sandwich with an oozing interior: no wonder they are an iconic match This recipe, spiked with fennel and Pernod, is livelier and more sophisticated than your usual tomato soup
cooking.nytimes.com
Shakshuka may be at the apex of eggs-for-dinner recipes, though in Israel it is breakfast food, a bright, spicy start to the day with a pile of pita or challah served on the side (It also makes excellent brunch or lunch food.) It’s a one-skillet recipe of eggs baked in a tomato-red pepper sauce spiced with cumin, paprika and cayenne First you make that sauce, which comes together fairly quickly on top of the stove, then you gently crack each of the eggs into the pan, nestling them into the sauce