Recipes By Martha Rose Shulman

1499 recipes found

Tunisian Style Baked Cauliflower Frittata
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Tunisian Style Baked Cauliflower Frittata

In the authentic version of this frittata there is a lot more olive oil, as well as chopped hard-boiled eggs. This one is lighter and simpler. It is great for lunch or dinner and keeps well in the refrigerator.

1h 30mServes 6
Stuffed Portabella Mushrooms With Swiss Chard
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Stuffed Portabella Mushrooms With Swiss Chard

Portabella (a.k.a. portobello) mushrooms are just grown-up cremini mushrooms. Huge portabellas are great for grilling, and the smaller ones are perfect for stuffing. You’ll be amazed by how much filling you can pack into a medium-size portabella. Serve these as a starter or a side dish.

45m12 stuffed mushrooms
Spicy Stir-Fried Tofu With Corn, Green Beans and Cilantro
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Spicy Stir-Fried Tofu With Corn, Green Beans and Cilantro

Few dishes are as simple as the stir-fry, which just requires some chopping, a few seasonings and a blistering hot pan. This sweet and spicy stir-fry is a light meatless meal, loaded with fresh green beans, corn and tofu. Ginger, garlic and jalapeño provide a little heat.

15m4 servings
Sprouted Brown Rice Bowl With Carrot and Hijiki
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Sprouted Brown Rice Bowl With Carrot and Hijiki

Sprouting any grain increases its nutritional value by making its nutrients more bio-available, among them calcium. But it’s the flavor and texture of this new sprout that have gotten me hooked. If you’ve been hard pressed to get your family to embrace brown rice, this may be the way to go. Julienne carrots with hijiki seaweed is a traditional Japanese combination. Here I’ve added some tofu to bulk up the protein. Hijiki is an excellent source of iodine, vitamin K, folate and magnesium; the seaweed is soaked and simmered before cooking with the carrot and aromatics.

30mServes three to four
Pasta With Walnut Sauce and Broccoli Raab
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Pasta With Walnut Sauce and Broccoli Raab

This creamy pasta is inspired by a Ligurian sauce that is traditionally served with ravioli filled with greens.

30mServes 6
Stir-Fried Tofu With Red Chard
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Stir-Fried Tofu With Red Chard

Most of the time that you devote to a stir-fry goes into chopping and measuring out ingredients. Sometimes the list looks long to me, and I fear the dish is going to take forever to make. But while I may spend 30 minutes prepping everything, I’ll spend only five minutes at the stove. For things to go well, it’s important that the mise en place be organized. If liquids are to be added to a dish at the same time, combine them in one bowl or measuring cup. If the garlic and ginger are to be added together, have them minced and combined in a small container. Clean your work area before you start cooking, and have everything close to the stove. Once you begin to stir-fry, you won’t be able to do anything except grab the next ingredient. Read the recipe carefully from beginning to end, have the table set, your rice or noodles cooked and plates ready. I love the pink color that tofu takes on when cooked with red chard. Beet greens would also do the trick. In this recipe, blanching the greens is part of the prep.

30mServes four
Steamed Jasmine Rice With Grilled Eggplant Salad
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Steamed Jasmine Rice With Grilled Eggplant Salad

This dish is adapted from a grilled eggplant salad recipe in Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid’s wonderful book "Seductions of Rice" (Artisan, New York). Jasmine rice is an aromatic, soft, long-grain rice widely used in Thailand. The Thai dishes that employ fragrant rice are also well seasoned, so this rice is traditionally cooked without salt. I like to use my panini grill for grilling eggplant.

1h 30mServes four
Greek Baked Beans With Honey and Dill
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Greek Baked Beans With Honey and Dill

These beans become creamy as they bake slowly in a sweet and sour broth flavored with honey and vinegar. You can make the dish with regular white beans, which will require soaking, or with large lima beans, which will not.

1h 30mServes six
Broccoli Rabe Timbale
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Broccoli Rabe Timbale

A timbale is a savory custard, gently baked in a water bath and unmolded before serving. You can use either broccoli rabe or baby broccoli for this one; the rabe has a stronger flavor, with a bitter edge. Bake this in individual ramekins or in a 1- or 1 1/2 -quart soufflé dish or ring mold and serve with a marinara sauce.

2h 15m6 servings
Giant Limas With Winter Squash
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Giant Limas With Winter Squash

I love the fact that beans, lentils and greens symbolize prosperity in the New Year in places as disparate as the American South and the South of France. I wonder if it’s really because lentils and beans are round like coins and swell when they cook, or if it’s because that’s about all anybody can afford to eat after the excesses of the holiday season. The notion of thrift wouldn’t apply to some of the other foods that symbolize good luck or prosperity in certain cultures – fish, for instance, or saffron. I’ve taken traditions from different places this week and thrown some of them together, focusing mainly on lentils, beans, greens and fish. These are simple dishes that I hope will help you to begin 2012 on a happy, healthy note. Look for more New Year’s dishes in the Recipes for Health index. Baking in a slow oven is the best way to cook large lima beans, which can fall apart easily if boiled too hard. This dish is luxuriously creamy (though there’s no cream in it) and comforting.

2h4 to 6 servings.
Thai Combination Fried Rice
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Thai Combination Fried Rice

This dish is loosely based on Thailand’s ubiquitous fried rice dish, kao pad. Usually some kind of animal protein accompanies the rice — squid, crabmeat, ham, chicken, whatever the cook has on hand. My version relies instead on tofu and vegetables; the most important ingredients are the rice itself, the garlic and the fish sauce. Have all of your ingredients prepared and close to the stove. Cooking goes very quickly.

10mServes four to six
Georgian Bean Salad With Cilantro Sauce
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Georgian Bean Salad With Cilantro Sauce

This is one of my favorite versions of a signature dish of the Republic of Georgia.

2hServes six
Root Vegetable Gratin
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Root Vegetable Gratin

Use turnips, rutabagas, kohlrabi or a mix of these vegetables in this delicate winter gratin.

1h 30mServes four
Refrigerator Corn Relish
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Refrigerator Corn Relish

This colorful, mildly spicy relish is sweet, but not as sweet by a long shot as many corn relish recipes I’ve seen and tasted. It goes well with everything from burgers to tofu sandwiches. You can add more chiles to the recipe if you want a spicier relish.

2 pints
Yogurt and Bean Dressing With Cilantro and Lime
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Yogurt and Bean Dressing With Cilantro and Lime

One of my favorite variations on Lisa Feldman’s bean and yogurt dressing base is her cilantro-lime dressing. Blend cilantro into just about any dressing, purée, sauce or soup, and I’ll be there with a spoon. I use a little more cilantro and lime juice than Lisa calls for, to achieve a pale speckled-green mixture that is slightly zingy; add a small green chile if you want a bit more spice.

5m1 cup, about (about 6 to 8 servings)
Tostadas With Smashed Black Beans or Vaqueros
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Tostadas With Smashed Black Beans or Vaqueros

Refried heirloom vaquero beans add a special touch to these tostadas, but black beans work, too. I have always had a weakness for black bean tostadas. These are not unlike Oaxacan tlayudas, though this recipe doesn’t call for that dish’s signature extra-large corn tortillas. I used luxurious black and white vaqueros from Rancho Gordo for these, but black beans will also work well. Cook them yourself (don’t use canned), because you’ll need the delicious broth. I don’t refry them for as long as I normally would because I like them moist, and vaqueros are starchier than black beans.

45m8 tostadas, serving 4 to 8
Summer Squash Refrigerator Pickles
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Summer Squash Refrigerator Pickles

With its spongy texture, summer squash will soak up the spicy flavors in this mix. Experiment with other spices if you wish. I like to use a mix of yellow squash and zucchini. Add the pickled squash to salads, use it as a relish or as a condiment with grains, meat or fish.

2 pints, serving 12
Creamy ‘Ranch’ Dressing
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Creamy ‘Ranch’ Dressing

Lisa Feldman, the director of culinary services at the schools division of the food services company Sodexo, understands that where there is ranch dressing, there are kids who will eat vegetables. Lisa is working to devise menus for schools that meet or exceed the Department of Agriculture’s Healthier US Schools Challenge requirements. With a deep understanding of the ingredients that school lunch programs have to work with, she developed a white bean and yogurt salad dressing base. The mixture will make a dressing that has much more nutritional value, considerably less sodium, and none of the additives in the long ingredient list on a bottle of commercial ranch dressing. Lisa credits the chef and cookbook author Joyce Goldstein for the idea. This is an adaptation of the ranch that Lisa developed for schools. It can be used as a dip, but also as a salad dressing for crisp salads. Adding the ice cube to the food processor helps to break down the fiber in the bean skins so that the dressing is less grainy.

5m1 cup, about 6 to 8 servings
Yogurt and Bean Dressing With Thai Flavors
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Yogurt and Bean Dressing With Thai Flavors

This version of Lisa Feldman’s yogurt and bean dressing is based on her slightly sweet Thai ginger dressing. Sriracha sauce, I’ve noticed, has become the go-to condiment for many chefs. It contributes just enough spice and pungency to the mix (you can add more if you want more heat). I like to serve this with grains, and as a dip or a dressing for crispy salads.

5m1 cup, about (about 6 to 8 servings)
Pickled Peaches With Sweet Spices
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Pickled Peaches With Sweet Spices

I love the balance of sweet, sour and spice in this recipe. These are refrigerator pickles, meant to be kept in the refrigerator, where they will keep for up to two months; so you could pull them out for Thanksgiving, though I doubt you will be able to resist them for that long. Although this recipe calls for a lot of sugar, you will not be consuming the syrup so don’t be alarmed by it.

2 to 2 1/2 pints
Pickled Green Beans
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Pickled Green Beans

In the South these are sometimes called “dilly beans” because of the dill that goes into the jars with the beans. My only reservation about making pickles out of green beans is that it is impossible for the beans to retain their wonderful green color. But I forget about this regret when I taste them, redolent as they are with coriander seeds and dill. You can serve them as an aperitif, garnish or side, or cut them up and add them to salads.

1 pint
Pears Poached in Red Wine and Cassis
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Pears Poached in Red Wine and Cassis

A classic French dessert with liqueur that adds a deep berry essence. Wine-poached pears make fora classic French dessert. I like to add a little crème de cassis liqueur to the wine, along with honey, vanilla and cinnamon. The cassis, made from black currants,adds a deep berry essence to the syrupy wine. You can serve these pears warm or chilled. The poached pears will keep well for a couple of days in the refrigerator. The pears will continue to soften.

20mServes 4 to 6
Stir-fried Broccoli Stalks and Flowers, Red Peppers, Peanuts and Tofu
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Stir-fried Broccoli Stalks and Flowers, Red Peppers, Peanuts and Tofu

Probably most of you have used broccoli time and again in stir-fries. In this version I cut the stalks into 2-inch julienne, which is almost like adding a separate vegetable to the mix of broccoli flowers and red pepper (also cut in julienne). There’s a lot of texture at play here – crisp-tender vegetables, crunchy peanuts and soft tofu. You can add a little spice if you want, but I’ve made the chili flakes optional.

7m4 servings
Yogurt Parfaits With Cherries and Pistachios
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Yogurt Parfaits With Cherries and Pistachios

Yogurt parfaits are easy to make, and they make great desserts and snacks.

9h 15m4 servings