Recipes By Genevieve Ko

159 recipes found

Horseradish Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Horseradish Sauce

A combination of cream, sour cream and mayonnaise temper the sharp bite of horseradish in this tangier take on the classic cream sauce. It’s especially delicious with roasted beef tenderloin or prime rib and becomes even more flavorful after a day or two in the refrigerator. This makes a lot of sauce in case the roast is especially large and everyone sauces their meat generously. Any leftover is fantastic in sandwiches or slathered over roasted salmon.

50mAbout 2 1/4 cups
Wontons
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Wontons

Wontons are dumplings, but not all dumplings are wontons. And not all wontons are Cantonese — there are thicker-skinned versions in northern China and spicy ones from Sichuan in the southwest, among others — but Hong Kong wontons, distinguished by silky wrappers and shrimp in the stuffing, are arguably the most delicious and nuanced. In Cantonese cooking, the inherent flavors of ingredients are meant to shine, so this formula seasons the shrimp and pork lightly with classic sauces, ginger and scallions. The filling can be varied to your tastes: You can add diced water chestnuts for crunch, chopped rehydrated dried shiitake or other Chinese mushrooms for their meatiness, or swap minced fish or scallops for the pork. Once the wontons are wrapped, they can be boiled for soup, fried or steamed, or frozen to cook in the future.

1h 15m50 to 60 wontons
Chocolate Hazelnut Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chocolate Hazelnut Cookies

These two-bite treats are for anyone who loves the combination of chocolate and hazelnuts. Hidden beneath a crunchy topping of toasted nuts is a dollop of chocolate hazelnut spread, which oozes like the middle of a molten lava cake when a cookie is served warm. For the creamiest centers, drop or pipe teaspoonfuls of the chocolate hazelnut spread on a parchment paper-lined pan and freeze until firm. Press those frozen mounds into the centers of the raw cookie dough rounds and bake. Whether you do that or simply drop the spread straight from the jar (as instructed below), you’ll end up with crackly-edged, fudgy cookies.

30m16 cookies
Chile Crisp
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chile Crisp

There’s just enough oil to slick all the crispy bits of chile, onion and sesame in this version of the spicy Chinese condiment, so it delivers as much crunch as it does salty, sweet, nutty heat. Dried minced onion from the supermarket spice aisle is a shortcut for the usual step of frying fresh minced onion, and it improves the crispness, too. You can experiment by mixing the hot and fruity flavors of different dried chile varieties, crushing them into flaky bits, or stick with ready-to-add red-pepper flakes. No matter what you use, this blend adds a little excitement to everything.

10mAbout 1 1/4 cups
Slow-Roasted Turkey With Apple Gravy
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Slow-Roasted Turkey With Apple Gravy

Padma Lakshmi likes big, bold flavors — spices and citrus especially — and infuses her Thanksgiving turkey with them. She prepares the bird over a bed of herbs and produce, then uses those pan juices to create a fruity yet savory gravy. To keep the turkey moist, Ms. Lakshmi starts with a buttermilk brine, then roasts the bird at a low temperature to make sure it cooks through but doesn’t dry out. But first, an initial blast in a very hot oven darkens the turkey in spots thanks to the sugar in the buttermilk brine. A final basting and uncovered cooking in the oven helps even out the mottled skin and ensures a delicate crispness. You can garnish the platter with the fruits, vegetables and herbs used in the recipe or serve the bird unadorned.

8 to 12 servings
Apple Crisp
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Apple Crisp

This warm dessert can quickly satisfy sweet tooth cravings, especially if you forgo peeling the apples, which adds a nice chewiness to the crunchy toasted topping and juicy, saucy apples. Choose a variety of apples, then adjust the amounts of sugar and lemon juice to strike the right tangy balance for the filling. Or customize your crisp by using your favorite spices and nuts. The dessert tastes particularly comforting hot out of the oven, with the caramelized apple juices bubbling around the nutty cookie-like clusters, but it’s just as good cold for breakfast the next day.

1h 15m6 to 8 servings
Pecan Sandie Pie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pecan Sandie Pie

All the richness of pecans, buttery and crisp in the cookie crust, candied in the gooey filling, run through this pie. In this take on a Thanksgiving classic, standard pie dough is swapped for pecan sandie dough. It’s not only tastier with its nuttiness, it also doesn’t require rolling. You can simply pat it into the pan and into a round for the top. For a toastier flavor and a little more crunch, bake the pecans first in a 350-degree oven until fragrant and a shade darker.

2hOne 9-inch pie
White Bean Hummus With Tahini and Coriander
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

White Bean Hummus With Tahini and Coriander

Coriander seeds add a welcome aroma to this white bean dip, rich with tahini and bright with lemon juice. The miso paste is optional, but it gives the mellow white beans a nice savory depth.

5m2 1/4 cups
Teriyaki Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Teriyaki Sauce

The beauty of teriyaki sauce is in its balance of salty and sweet without the noise of sharp garlic, hot chiles or any other ingredients. You can add seasonings, if you like, or stick to the original, which calls for only sake, soy and mirin. Brown sugar gives this blend gloss and a syrupy consistency ideal for drizzling over ready-to-eat ingredients. But you could also skip the sugar and simmer just sake, soy sauce and mirin in the proportions below with your dish, thickening it into a glaze that clings to the main ingredient.

15mAbout 1 1/4 cups
Blueberry Syrup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Blueberry Syrup

Run through with plump berries, this compote-meets-syrup mix makes any meal feel as leisurely as weekend brunch. A pair of natural sweeteners takes the place of refined sugar: Fresh berries cook down with only lemon juice to concentrate their natural summery sweetness, then earthy maple syrup adds depth. You can use the larger amount of syrup for a pancake pourable blend, or the smaller quantity for a spoonable topping.

15mAbout 1 1/4 cups
Homemade Dumpling Wrappers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Homemade Dumpling Wrappers

From-scratch dumpling dough requires only two ingredients — flour and water — and the water temperature yields different types of wrappers. Cold water is best for boiled dumplings because it causes the flour’s proteins to form the gluten that makes dough chewy and able to withstand vigorously boiling water. Hot water denatures flour’s proteins, resulting in dough supple enough to roll very thin and into tender wrappers ideal for pan-fried and steamed dumplings, such as chile crisp dumplings. The hot water for this dough should be hotter than warm and cooler than boiling and can come from the faucet’s hot tap. Letting the dough rest allows it to more fully absorb the water and relax, which will make rolling even easier.

45mAbout 35 wrappers
Scallion Egg Wrap
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Scallion Egg Wrap

This is a common Chinese-American adaptation of a breakfast dish served throughout northern China and Taiwan. Street vendors start peddling jian bing as the sun rises, spreading a wheat flour and mung bean batter on a large griddle until thin, then cracking an egg or two on top. They scatter on scallions, cilantro and pickled mustard greens, and scramble and spread the mix before squirting on hoisin sauce and chile paste. Sometimes, they add sliced lettuce or wonton crisps for crunch. Making jian bing is a specialized skill and not easily recreated, but this approximation delivers the pleasure and convenience of an omelet cooked onto a thin pancake, the pancake here being store-bought flour tortillas. When warmed, they share the comforting chewiness of the original. This version uses a few essential condiments: Pickled mustard greens, hoisin and chile paste can be found in Chinese or Asian markets or online. But you can, of course, leave them out. In fact, kids often prefer just the egg and tortilla.

5m1 wrap
Blackberry Apple Pie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Blackberry Apple Pie

Packed with spiced fruit, this feels like an old-fashioned apple pie, with a coziness beneath the modern lattice. Juicy blackberries highlight the tanginess of sweet-tart apples and tint the filling a mellow shade of pink. Wide dough strips, tightly woven, leave just enough of a gap in the top to allow a little steam to vent. Keeping the abundance of fruit mostly encased helps it bake through to tenderness and allows their juices to thicken to a jammy syrup. If you don’t want to weave a lattice, you can simply cover the filling with a round of rolled dough and cut vent holes in it.

2h 30mOne 9-inch pie
Peanut Butter Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Peanut Butter Cookies

No mixer is required to make these craggy rounds that deliver all the comfort of eating a spoonful of peanut butter straight out of the jar — but with the creamy-candy richness of peanut butter chips in each bite. (If you’re a crunchy peanut butter person, you can throw in whole salted nuts, too.) Because of their low proportion of flour, these little disks develop fudgy centers inside lightly crisp edges. There are countless varieties of peanut butter in markets and all yield different cookie results. These use natural peanut butter, which is just peanuts blended with salt, so they taste especially peanutty.

45mAbout 50 cookies
Custard Pie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Custard Pie

Inspired by dan tat, small egg custard tarts popular in Cantonese dim sum, this pie is also reminiscent of American and European baked custards and flan from around the globe. The slick, jiggly vanilla filling is delicious for its comforting eggy flavor. It’s simple to whisk together, but if that whisking results in bubbles that pop and crater on top, simply cover them up with a dusting of confectioners’ sugar or ground dehydrated berries. The berries add a pop of color and a hint of fruitiness.

2hOne 9-inch pie
Pasta With Pumpkin Seed Pesto
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pasta With Pumpkin Seed Pesto

Fragrant with basil and rich with pumpkin seeds and cheese, this is the ideal dish to make ahead of time and pack for lunch. Instead of preparing it to eat as a hot meal or a cold salad, it’s designed to be chilled and then enjoyed cold or at room temperature. Cooking the garlic quickly in the water boiled for the pasta softens its sharp edge. A splash of that same boiling water blends with the basil to keep it green. Rinsing the pasta after cooking it helps the pesto stay flavorful for days in the refrigerator. The tomatoes add a tangy freshness, but they can be skipped altogether or swapped for green beans or peas (just drop them with the pasta during the last few minutes or cooking).

25m4 to 6 servings
Spiced Pumpkin Cheesecake
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Spiced Pumpkin Cheesecake

Fluffier than both cheesecake and pumpkin pie, this dessert combines a silky cream cheese-pumpkin filling and a tangy sour cream topping with a graham cracker crust. The warmth of ginger, ground and candied, ties together the other warming spices: cinnamon, cardamom and turmeric for flavors reminiscent of — and as soothing as — turmeric tea and chai.

1h 30m8 to 12 servings
Quick Raspberry Jam
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Quick Raspberry Jam

To preserve the fresh taste of raspberries, this method for jam uses just a little sugar and cooks the fruit for less than 10 minutes. The wide surface area of a skillet helps the berries break down and the sugar melt into syrup quickly. The resulting jam can be refrigerated or enjoyed right away while it’s still warm. Tangy and not too sweet, it’s delicious slathered over biscuits, scones or toast, spooned over yogurt or oatmeal, or used in savory dishes, like biscuit breakfast sandwiches or grilled pork.

10mAbout 2/3 cup
Broccoli-Walnut Pesto Pasta
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Broccoli-Walnut Pesto Pasta

Pesto becomes more full-bodied with the addition of broccoli that’s blanched in the same pot as the pasta and fresher with the combination of mint and lemon. For a sauce that's light and loose, use only the florets — not the stems. Raw walnuts have a welcome natural sweetness and nice crunch that complement the pesto, but you can leave them out or substitute sunflower seeds if you have a tree-nut allergy.

25m4 to 6 servings
Farro With Salmon, Cucumber, Radicchio and Dill
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Farro With Salmon, Cucumber, Radicchio and Dill

Salmon steams right over toasty farro, saving you from having to wash an extra pan. The silky fish and chewy grains get a refreshing lemony salad of cucumbers and radicchio on top, which is prepared while the farro cooks. Each bite goes from crunchy cool to warm and comforting, though the salad is also good room temperature or cold. If you don't like the bitter edge of radicchio, try thinly sliced endive or fennel instead. For a salty, creamy hit of flavor, sprinkle the top of the salad with crumbled feta.

40m4 servings
Whiskey-Glazed Salmon With Salt-Crusted Potatoes
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Whiskey-Glazed Salmon With Salt-Crusted Potatoes

The savory snap of baby potatoes crusted in salt is just what you want with the subtle sweetness of this fish’s glaze. The fish and the potatoes cook and come together at the same time in this fast meal. To achieve silky salmon without turning on the oven, gently cook it in a shallow pool of sauce that thickens to a syrup as it simmers. The potatoes, prepared using a technique from the Canary Islands, simply boil in generously salted water, then finish cooking with a splash of the liquid. When it evaporates, the salt that remains crusts onto the spuds. Shaking the pan vigorously helps the salt coat the potatoes evenly and sheds excess crystals. Serve with a salad or, after the glaze is scraped onto the fish, throw baby spinach into the still-hot skillet and stir to just wilt.

20m4 servings
Biscuit Breakfast Sandwiches
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Biscuit Breakfast Sandwiches

This is the pleasure of brunch at home: a cozy sandwich that you eat as soon as you finish stacking it. Nice and hot, it’s pure joy with a cup of coffee. Crunchy brown tops give way to tender, buttery bread in these biscuits, which cradle fluffy scrambled eggs draped with melted cheese. Whether you slip in some bacon, sausage or ham is up to you, but you definitely want to slather jam all over the biscuits. It’s a salty-sweet combination inspired by the chef Jonathan Whitener and the pastry director Thessa Diadem of All Day Baby, a restaurant in Los Angeles, where they make thousands of biscuit sandwiches each week.

45m4 sandwiches
Sausage Sage Biscuits
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Sausage Sage Biscuits

For an easy, savory breakfast treat, browned sausage and sage are folded into biscuit dough that’s cut into squares. A generous grinding of black pepper in the mix and on top adds a bit of kick. The flaky biscuits are delicious on their own or stuffed with eggs: Scrambled, fried or poached are all great, but so is egg salad. If you’d like, you can garnish the biscuits with whole sage leaves. Simply brush the unbaked squares with a little melted butter, gently press on a sage leaf, and brush the leaf with a little more butter before baking.

1h20 biscuits
Whipped Cream Scones With Chocolate and Cherries
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Whipped Cream Scones With Chocolate and Cherries

Chocolate and cherry is a classic combination, but how these scones come together is what makes them really special: Lightly whipping the cream before folding it into the dough creates tiny air bubbles that result in a scone that leans more toward cake than bread. They also develop a delicate, crackly crust and a melt-in-your-mouth creaminess. On top of the chocolate chunks, tart cherries and the fluffiness, here’s another reason to love these scones: The dough is made by hand and doesn’t require rolling or cutting, meaning less mess in the kitchen.

30m12 scones