Recipes By Martha Rose Shulman

1499 recipes found

Lentil and Escarole Soup
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Lentil and Escarole Soup

The combination of legumes and bitter greens like escarole is common in southern Italy. Escarole is a bitter lettuce that looks a little bit like frisée but with wider, tougher leaves. It’s high in vitamin A and a good source of iron and potassium. This recipe is adapted from one in “Cucina Rustica,” by Evan Kleiman and Viana La Place. If you can't find escarole, you can substitute any hearty green.

1h 10mServes four to six
Lasagna With Tomato Sauce and Roasted Eggplant
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Lasagna With Tomato Sauce and Roasted Eggplant

This is a great do-ahead dish. I made two of them for a dinner party during a very busy week; I roasted the eggplant one day, made the sauce another, assembled the lasagnas quickly on the morning of my dinner party and refrigerated them until I got home about an hour before my guests were due to arrive.

2hServes 6
Rice Bowl With Oven-Baked Miso Tofu
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Rice Bowl With Oven-Baked Miso Tofu

I use the same marinade for the peppers as I do for the tofu in this sweet and spicy mix of toppings. Kimchi is the main vegetable, but if you only want it as a condiment add another vegetable of your choice – steamed or blanched broccoli or greens, for example, or roasted squash, or anything else that floats your boat.

45m4 servings
Winter Tomato Soup With Bulgur
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Winter Tomato Soup With Bulgur

Inspired by a recipe in Diane Kochilas’s wonderful new book “The Country Cooking of Greece,” this thick, satisfying soup is based on a summer soup made with fresh tomatoes. It looked so comforting that I decided to use canned tomatoes and make a winter version. The onion not only contributes flavor but also texture to this thick potage.

1hServes 4 to 6
Tuna or Salmon Burgers
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Tuna or Salmon Burgers

These high-protein burgers are a great way to edge away from beef and still feel like you’re eating a burger. If you sear them quickly they’ll be nice and moist.

1h 20m4 burgers
Tuna Mushroom Burgers
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Tuna Mushroom Burgers

I have always had a weakness for tuna burgers, and I like these even more than the classic all-fish burger because the mushrooms assure a moist texture. They are inspired by a recipe by Clifford Pleau, which was presented at the 2015 Worlds of Healthy Flavors conference. If you use sushi-grade tuna for these burgers you might want to just sear them on each side to get a rare, sushi-like interior. If you use ahi tuna, you could still cook them rare, or cook them for about 2 minutes on each side. This will produce a burger that is more well done but still nice and moist. The burgers are delicious either way. Don’t use a food processor to chop the tuna; finely chop with a knife or a cleaver. The texture will be too pasty if you use a food processor. I found that the punch of the wasabi paste dissipated when the burgers were cooked, so add more if desired.

1hServes 4
Grilled or Roasted Pattypan “Steaks” With Italian Salsa Verde
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Grilled or Roasted Pattypan “Steaks” With Italian Salsa Verde

Cut into thick slices, pattypan squash, which look sort of like small flying saucers, can make a juicy sort of “steak” that could be topped by a pungent sauce. Grill or roast the “steaks” and serve them with this gorgeous green sauce. You’ll need only half the amount of salsa verde that this recipe yields, but it keeps very well in the refrigerator and it’s great to have on hand.

40m4 servings
Mushroom and Beef Burgers
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Mushroom and Beef Burgers

These hamburgers — cut through with roasted mushrooms — were inspired by the versions cooked by the chef Scott Samuel of the Culinary Institute of America. They are here made of half beef, half roasted mushrooms, though Mr. Samuel went two parts meat to one part mushrooms. Either way, they are incredibly moist.

50mEight 4.5-ounce patties or six 6-ounce patties
Turkey and Vegetable Burgers
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Turkey and Vegetable Burgers

Turkey meat is relatively lean, and so turkey burgers are often quite dry. The vegetables in this particular burger help keep the patty moist.

30m6 burgers
Quintessential Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Quintessential Chocolate Chip Cookies

Sherry Yard's iconic chocolate-chip cookies are just the right mix of chewy and crisp, with a bittersweet morsel of chocolate in each bite. They are the cookies anyone who asks you to make chocolate chip cookies are asking for -- the kind of chocolate cookie that demands to be dunked into a glass of ice-cold milk.

40mAbout 4 dozen cookies
Soufflé Omelet With Apricot Sauce
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Soufflé Omelet With Apricot Sauce

Soufflé omelets are quick desserts that sound a lot more difficult to make than they actually are. The sauce for these is adapted from an apricot filling for crepes in Sherry Yard’s book “Desserts by the Yard.”

25mYield: 4 servings.
Cherry and Apricot Clafoutis
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Cherry and Apricot Clafoutis

Cherries and apricots are both in season together, and combine nicely in many desserts. I use half almond flour and half all-purpose flour in this clafoutis. Serve it warm or at room temperature, and eat leftovers for breakfast.

1h 30m8 servings.
Chicken Soup With Leeks and Lemon
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Chicken Soup With Leeks and Lemon

This is inspired by both the classic Greek soup avgolemono and Scottish cockaleekee. Start with a flavorful chicken or turkey broth, simmer leeks and rice or bulgur in the soup until tender, then enrich with eggs and lemon. The trick here is to begin with a flavorful stock and not to allow the eggs to curdle when you combine the soup and the avgolemono sauce. You can make a vegetarian version of this using a garlic broth or by making a robust vegetable stock using the dark leafy parts of the leeks.

1h 10m6 servings
Meal in a Bowl With Chicken, Rice Noodles and Spinach
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Meal in a Bowl With Chicken, Rice Noodles and Spinach

This comforting soup is a simplified version of a Vietnamese phô or a Japanese ramen (using rice sticks instead of somen).

1h 30mServes 4 to 6 (you’ll have some chicken left over)
Chicken Soup With Lime and Avocado
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Chicken Soup With Lime and Avocado

When I lived in France, in the ‘80s and early ‘90s, I hardly ever ate avocados. Those sold in the markets were smooth, thin-skinned varieties grown mostly in Israel. They were watery, not as creamy or nutty-tasting as Haas avocados, the dark, pebbly-skinned variety that we get in California. “Poor man’s butter,” they used to call avocados when my father was a child. (Now they would more aptly be described as “rich man’s butter.”) Simple Mexican soups like this one often include avocado, which is diced or sliced and added to the soup when it’s ladled into bowls.

30mServes four
Chicken Soup With Lemon
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Chicken Soup With Lemon

Bulgur is just one grain you can add to this lemony soup; quinoa or rice, which is traditional, work equally well. If you use all of the shredded chicken called for in this recipe (you don’t have to), the soup becomes much like a stew. Make the broth the day before; after it chills overnight in the refrigerator, skim the fat from the surface.

1h 45mServes six generously
Turkey (or Chicken) Soup With Lemon and Rice
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Turkey (or Chicken) Soup With Lemon and Rice

This comforting soup is inspired by a Middle Eastern chicken soup. It’s great with or without leftover turkey — don’t hesitate to pull turkey stock from the freezer and make it with just vegetables and rice.

1hServes six
Cherry Tabbouleh
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Cherry Tabbouleh

Like authentic tabbouleh, this is primarily an herb salad with a little bit of bulgur and the wonderful juicy surprise of cherries in each bite.

10m4 servings
Cucumber Raita
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Cucumber Raita

Serve this raita as a refreshing side dish with grains or with any curry. Or enjoy it on its own for lunch.

20mServes 4 as a side dish
Beet and Tomato Gazpacho
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Beet and Tomato Gazpacho

The color alone is reason enough to make this gorgeous gazpacho. This is inspired by a gazpacho by Dani Garcia in Ana von Bremzen’s “The New Spanish Table.” Mr. Garcia’s soup also includes cherries, which I don’t miss in this rendition. One roasted beet transforms a classic into a beautiful original.

10mServes 6
Tomato Frittata With Fresh Marjoram or Thyme
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Tomato Frittata With Fresh Marjoram or Thyme

One of my summer favorites, this frittata makes a perfect and substantial meal served cold or at room temperature.

45mFour to six servings
Eggs Poached in Marinara Sauce
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Eggs Poached in Marinara Sauce

In southern Italy this dish has the evocative name Uova al Purgatorio. When I make tomato sauce in the summer, I freeze it in half-cup portions, which makes this meal for one easy to throw together.

10m1 serving
Pasta With Mussels in Tomato Sauce
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Pasta With Mussels in Tomato Sauce

Semolina linguine is a traditional and wonderful pasta to use. But you can make the dish with whole-wheat or gluten-free pasta; both are getting better and better. Look for a flat noodle like tagliatelle, fettuccine or linguine. If you use whole-wheat or gluten-free pasta, make sure not to overcook it. My rule of thumb is to check for doneness a minute before the suggested cooking time on the package; noodles should be cooked al dente.

50m4 servings
Polenta With Wild Mushrooms and Marinara Sauce
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Polenta With Wild Mushrooms and Marinara Sauce

Years ago, I abandoned the traditional stir-until-you-get-a-blister-on-the-inside-of-your-thumb method for making polenta and became a convert to the easy oven-baked version. But then I began working with polenta freshly milled from heirloom varieties of corn, and went back to the top-of-the-stove method because the results were exceptionally creamy and fragrant. This was at the urging of Kay Rentschler, who is the creative director of the Anson Mills website and writes its recipes. She is very specific about the best way to cook the mill’s products, so I followed her instructions for polenta, which are shared here. The flavor of the corn is heavenly, and once it begins to thicken, you don’t have to stir continuously, so it is not tedious to make. You could serve polenta as a side, but I like to show it off and serve it as a main dish (a boon for those who now eschew pasta). It’s a wonderful vehicle for any number of toppings, but my favorite is a simple tomato sauce embellished with pan-cooked mushrooms, preferably meaty, flavorful varieties like oysters or maitakes. If you want to be extravagant, throw a few chanterelles into the mix.

1h4 servings