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Get Southern Peach Julep Recipe from Food Network
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This shot seems to be a favorite among bar patrons.
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Make homemade beef stock by roasting marrow bones and cooking on a low simmer with aromatic vegetables and herbs.
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Cream cheese and lime gelatin are stirred into a melted marshmallow and lemon-lime soda mixture in this creamy chilled salad with mayonnaise, whipped topping, pineapple and nuts.
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A classic cranberry-pineapple gelatin salad expected on everyone's Thanksgiving menu, this version adds a flavor twist with orange zest and pecans.
cooking.nytimes.com
This recipe is by Oliver Schwaner-Albright and takes 10 minutes, plus 4 hours' refrigeration. Tell us what you think of it at The New York Times - Dining - Food.
Ingredients: blood orange, salt, gelatin
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Festive red, white, and blue gelatin layered squares will be a hit dessert at your 4th of July meal.
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Forget run-of-the-mill cheesecakes ... try this no-bake cheesecake with gelatin and an optional fruit topping--it's been impressing folks for generations!
cooking.nytimes.com
Chocolate-rum mousse, which ran in The Times in 1966, was a remarkably efficient recipe in two distinct ways First, it invoked nearly every food trend of its moment: chocolate desserts were an exotic new fix; any respectable grown-up dessert contained rum; mousse suggested that you understood French cooking, or at least pretended to; two cups of cream was de rigueur; and the recipe assumed you owned one of the kitchen’s latest appliances, the home blender Second, the newfangled blender actually did make the recipe a wonder of efficiency: all you had to do was layer the ingredients and blend, and a dinner-party mousse was yours.
cooking.nytimes.com
The Sgroppino is an old between-course palate cleanser, dessert or aperitif drink that marries prosecco with sorbet and a touch of vodka It’s a simple enough affair once you have the sorbet, in this case made from white peach puree You very gently whisk the spirit (in this case, peach brandy or peach vodka) and wine (in this case, prosecco) into the sorbet and turn it into a glass, to be consumed, ideally, quickly, while it still retains a bit of the semifreddo intact.
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This is a yummy fresh summer fruit sauce and because you make it in a slow cooker it doesn't heat up your kitchen!