Search Results (1,372 found)
cooking.nytimes.com
While all sorts of products, like oysters, were coming by boat from the East to Michigan and the rest of the Midwest during the pioneer period, the European families who settled there generally liked to stick to their ethnic traditions “In the Upper Peninsula, there were the Finlanders, and they had Cornish hens,” said Priscilla Massie, a co-author of the cookbook “Walnut Pickles and Watermelon Cake: A Century of Michigan Cooking.” Then there were the Germans families, who, Ms Massie said, tended to adopt Thanksgiving first
www.foodnetwork.com
Get RACHAEL RAY'S STUFFED BABY BELLAS Stuffed Baby Bellas Recipe from Food Network
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Lobster of the Links Napa Cabbage Wraps Recipe from Food Network
www.foodnetwork.com
Get Snoqualmie River "Hot Rocks" Pacific Coast Seafood and Marinades Recipe from Food Network
cooking.nytimes.com
Wheat berries sweetened with honey and perfumed with rose water and spices make a delicious breakfast on their own or stirred into yogurt (that’s the way I prefer to serve this) Whether you use farro, kamut, spelt or wheat berries (and whether you are cooking them for breakfast or for dinner) the trick here is to cook the grains for as long as it takes for them to really soften and to splay (that is, to burst at one end).
www.delish.com
This hearty, Franco-Asian beef stew gets a fresh kick from basil and hot chiles.
www.allrecipes.com
This velvety fennel soup with leeks, potatoes, and cream can be served hot or cold like a Vichyssoise for an elegant first course.
www.chowhound.com
A co-worker clued me in that red wine isn't necessarily the best ingredient for sauerbraten. He didn't give me his Mom's exact recipe, but I figured it out anyway...
www.allrecipes.com
This recipe is protein-packed with quinoa and sunflower, sesame, chia, and flax seeds; lightly sweetened with coconut, honey, and applesauce.