Recipes By Emily Weinstein

38 recipes found

Corniest Corn Muffins
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Corniest Corn Muffins

These muffins are flat, firm-topped and cheerfully yellow; with an old-fashioned texture — grainy with small holes running through the crumb — and a wholesome, straight-from the farm flavor — they’re tangy from the buttermilk and sweet from both the cornmeal (try to find stone-ground) and the corn kernels.

40m12 muffins
Red Wine-Braised Short Ribs With Lemongrass and Soy
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Red Wine-Braised Short Ribs With Lemongrass and Soy

This is the dish that the chef Marcus Samuelsson made for President Obama when he visited the restaurant Red Rooster Harlem. This is an easy braise with wonderful flavors — plum sauce, lemongrass, soy sauce — and as it is pointed out in "The Red Rooster Cookbook," short ribs taste more expensive than they actually are, making them ideal for guests. Make it earlier in the day, then simply reheat when you're ready to serve dinner. The book suggests freezing the extra braising liquid in ice cube trays, so you can slip it into pan sauces or pasta for oomph.

3h4 servings
Pistachio Poundcake With Strawberries
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Pistachio Poundcake With Strawberries

Ground pistachios give this loaf cake a lovely nutty flavor, green hue and tender crumb. It's adapted from the cookbook "Sweeter Off the Vine," by Yossy Arefi, which often incorporates Middle Eastern ingredients in unexpected and appealing ways. Top slices of the cake with juicy macerated strawberries and a dollop of whipped cream. If you can't find lavender buds, use 1 tablespoon of finely chopped mint or basil leaves. But do not add the chopped herbs to the mortar with the sugar. Instead, toss them with the berries right before serving.

1h 30m8 servings
Devil's Food White-Out Cake
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Devil's Food White-Out Cake

The cake is three layers of devil’s food with a fourth one crumbled over the icing, artfully if your cake is neat, desperately if it’s not. Crumb topping is a great mask for many of the aesthetic problems a cake might have.

2h 40m
Streusel
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Streusel

15m
Fruit-Stuffed Loin of Pork
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Fruit-Stuffed Loin of Pork

2h8 to 10 servings
1-2-3-4 Cake
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1-2-3-4 Cake

1hOne nine-inch, two-layer cake
Gérard’s Mustard Tart
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Gérard’s Mustard Tart

Be sure to use strong mustard from Dijon. Dorie's friend Gérard Jeannin uses Dijon’s two most popular mustards in his tart: smooth, known around the world as Dijon, and grainy or old-fashioned, known in France as “à l’ancienne.” You can use either one or the other, or you can adjust the proportions to match your taste, but whatever you do, make sure your mustard is fresh, bright colored, and powerfully fragrant. Do what Gérard would do: smell it first. If it just about brings tears to your eyes, it’s fresh enough for this tart.

1h 20m
Chicken in a Pot
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Chicken in a Pot

Serve this as a stew, with everything in the bowl, or as a plain broth, followed by the chicken and vegetables on a platter. Canned stock is a decent option here, as is water, because the cooking liquid gains flavor from the chicken and vegetables during simmering. Of course, real stock is the best option.

1h 30m4 servings
Simple Chickpea Soup
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Simple Chickpea Soup

This recipe came to The Times in 2013, when the food writers Michael Pollan and Michael Moss were prompted to make “a tasty, reasonably healthy lunch” using ingredients available at most grocery stores. “No farmers’ market produce, no grass-fed beef or artisanal anything,” the prompt stated. They came up with a few simple dishes: pizza, a salad of sliced avocados and oranges, and this simple but flavorful soup, which Mr. Pollan regularly made for his family and relies on canned garbanzos.

1h 15mAbout 6 servings
Steamed Artichokes
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Steamed Artichokes

Serve the artichokes hot, warm, at room temperature or cold.

45m
Rugelach
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Rugelach

These light and flaky pastries, popular among American and European Jews, are adapted from a recipe by Dorie Greenspan, the prolific cookbook author and winner of four James Beard Awards. The crescent shape and layers of filling might look complicated, but the dough is quite simple to put together (hello, food processor!) and easy to work with. Beyond that, it's really just a matter of rolling, spreading and cutting. These are meant to be bite-sized – about one-inch long – but if you want them bigger, go right ahead. (Should you choose to go larger, Dorie suggests rolling the dough into rectangles instead of circles and cutting the dough into bigger triangles. In that way, you would ultimately get more layers of filling and dough.)

4h36 cookies
Tart Dough
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Tart Dough

While Dorie Greenspan uses this dough for savories, it’s really an all-purpose recipe that produces a not-too-rich, slightly crisp crust that is as happy holding pastry cream for a strawberry tart as it is encasing a creamy cheese filling for a quiche. This is a good dough to use anytime you see a recipe calling for pâte brisée. Be prepared: The dough should chill for at least 3 hours.

5h 15mMakes one 9 - to 9 ½-inch tart shell
Easy Roast Chicken
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Easy Roast Chicken

A 3 1/2 pound bird should roast in 55 to 60 minutes, while a 4 1/2 pound bird requires 60 to 65 minutes. If using a basket or a V-rack, be sure to grease it so the chicken does not stick to it. If you don't have a basket or V-rack, set the bird on a regular rack and use balls of aluminum foil to keep the roasting chicken propped up on its side.

1h 30m4 servings