Recipes By Mark Bittman
974 recipes found

Edamame in the Shell
This recipe for edamame in the shell, brought to The Times by Mark Bittman in 2012, could not be easier. It can be made either on the stovetop or the microwave. Ready in minutes, it makes a perfect snack or complement to a dinner of chicken teriyaki with rice.

Broiled Cornish Hens With Lemon And Balsamic Vinegar

Broiled Melon With Balsamic

Southwest Potatoes
Here is a substantial breakfast inspired by (though far better than) airplane food that can be served on its own or alongside eggs. With all the classic flavors of a burrito — black beans, jalapeños, corn, cheese and cilantro — it would also make great filling for a corn or flour tortilla, with potatoes added in place of rice. Exercise patience when you cook the potatoes. The key to this recipe is leaving them alone once you’ve put them in the pan, neither stirring nor shaking, for at least 10 minutes, so they develop a nice crust.

Corn and Green Chile Soup

Red-Eye Hash

Shredded Red-Chile Meat
Tortillas, which of course can be used in a variety of ways, are also potential tacos. This recipe for a kind of shredded chile-sauced meat — beef, pork, chicken or lamb — goes perfectly with homemade tortillas.

Vichyssoise
This is a simple take on a classic cold soup that is as delicious to eat as it is to say: Vishi-swazz! It is dead easy to make as well. Just sauté potatoes with some chopped leeks, then simmer them all with stock until tender. Send the mixture through a food processor or blender, let cool, then chill in the refrigerator until ready to serve. Garnish with chopped chives.

Roasted Eggplant-Yogurt Cheese Dip

Mark Bittman’s Grilled Eggplant Salad With Yogurt
This dish is a creamy and mild eggplant salad made with a quick dressing of yogurt and seasonings. You can grill the eggplant half an hour before you serve the salad, or a half a day (or longer) ahead; it doesn't matter much at all.

Mark Bittman's Pastry Cream

Quick Chicken Stock

Asian-Style Enhanced Stock

Stock With Mediterranean Spices

Dark Turkey Stock

Stock With Asian Spices

Basic Enhanced Canned Stock

Mushroom Soup
If the word “mushroom” conjures for you white buttons in little supermarket tubs, you’re not alone. But there is a big world of mushrooms out there, and you don’t have to be a forager to live in it. Wild mushrooms can be found in spring, summer and fall, but farmed mushrooms, grown mostly in the dark, are always around and a little easier to find than the ones hiding in the woods. So are dried mushrooms, which may be domesticated or truly wild and which are among the most flavorful ingredients you can keep in your pantry. This lovely soup is made with a combination of dried and fresh. It's delightfully simple – it comes together in about a half hour – which allows the complex flavors of the mushrooms to really shine through.

Cold Chickpea-Tahini Soup
Chickpeas have an irresistibly robust and nutty flavor, and a texture that can run from crunchy to tender. Dried chickpeas take longer to cook than other beans (two hours is a likely cooking time); use enough water, and the process is stress-free. One major benefit to cooking chickpeas yourself — aside from the superior flavor and texture — is that the water you cook them in becomes particularly rich and flavorful by the time they’re done. Save it for soups like the cold one here, which is a refreshing riff on hummus.

Cucumber Soup With Soy and Scallions
For hot days, you can’t beat this take on cucumber soup, which blows away the “classic” dairy-based version.

Lemony Parsley-and-Egg Soup

Strawberry-Orange Soup

Fresh Corn and Tomato Soup
