Recipes By Melissa Clark

1476 recipes found

Persian Tamarind Fish
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Persian Tamarind Fish

In this complexly flavored and highly sophisticated dish from the cookbook author Louisa Shafia, tamarind, caramelized onion, ground almonds and barberries are made into a thick and tangy paste that gets spread over fish fillets before baking. Thinner fillets work better here than thick, center-cut pieces. You want more surface area on which to spread the herbal barberry mixture, which can be made a day ahead and stored in the fridge. If you can't find dried barberries, use dried cranberries instead.

1h 15m8 servings
Creamy Tomato Gazpacho With Crunchy Pecorino
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Creamy Tomato Gazpacho With Crunchy Pecorino

At lunchtime on a steamy day, I got the unlikely idea to cross a smoothie with gazpacho. Given my languid state, I had wanted something icy and filling, but not too taxing to prepare. That’s when the idea to merge a gazpacho and a smoothie crept into my head. I’d swap tomatoes for the usual berries; add garlic, oil, vinegar and salt to punch up the flavor; and keep the yogurt for heft. As the blender whirled, my stomach growled, and I nibbled on pieces of crunchy cheese cracker I had left over from a recent salad. Instead of croutons, I like to fry grated cheese until crisp, then crumble it over greens. For this batch, I had used pecorino, which seemed like a natural complement to the sheep’s-milk yogurt. So I saved some for garnish.

20m4 servings
Butternut Squash Polenta With Sausage and Onion
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Butternut Squash Polenta With Sausage and Onion

In this savory, satisfying dinner, finely ground polenta and grated butternut squash are cooked together in one pot, the squash adding sweetness to the savory cornmeal. Then browned sausages and onions seasoned with rosemary and fennel seeds are spooned on top to round out the meal. It’s a dish simple enough for a weeknight, but the butternut squash makes it interesting enough to serve to guests.If you can’t find finely ground polenta, you can substitute coarse; just add another cup of water and plan on cooking the mixture for an extra 10 to 15 minutes. You could also substitute coarsely ground cornmeal for the fine polenta. Try to avoid using instant (or quick-cooking) polenta, but if it's all you can find, add the squash, salt and bay leaf to the boiling water 15 minutes before stirring in the polenta, so the squash gets a chance to soften. Just do not use the prepared polenta that comes in a tube. You can grate the squash the day before and store it in a plastic bag in the fridge.

45m4 servings
Sabzi Polo (Persian Herbed Rice)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Sabzi Polo (Persian Herbed Rice)

The star of this herb-flecked Persian-style rice recipe, by the actor and food blogger Naz Deravian, is the lavash tahdig — a crisp, buttery layer of toasted lavash flatbread at the bottom of the pot. Break it into pieces and use it to garnish the platter of rice, making sure everyone gets a piece. The rice itself is highly fragrant, scented with dill, mint and whatever other soft herbs you can get, along with heady saffron. You need to find thin flatbread to make this; the kind used for wraps is a good bet. It will take some time to clean all the herbs, but don't worry about taking off each leaf. Using tender stems and sprigs is perfectly fine.

2h 30m8 servings
Fresh Tomato Soup With Basil and Farro
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fresh Tomato Soup With Basil and Farro

You overbought fresh tomatoes at the farmers' market and now you're left with a pile of overly-soft, rapidly-ripening fruit. What to do? Make a hearty, vegetable-based soup with those mushy tomatoes puréed into satiny sweetness. To mimic the creaminess of many tomato soup recipes, I often blend softly stewed tomatoes with a grain, in this case, farro. It adds an earthy flavor, and body, to make a tomato soup with bona fide stick-to-your ribs inclinations.

1h 30m6 small servings
Butterflied Leg of Lamb With Lemon Salsa Verde
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Butterflied Leg of Lamb With Lemon Salsa Verde

One of the joys of a butterflied leg of lamb is that it satisfies lovers of rare and medium-well meat at the same time. This is because of its uneven thickness. When you spread the meat out and roast or grill it at high heat, the thicker parts stay pinker than the thinner bits. Everyone ends up happy. Here, the meat is seasoned with cumin, lemon, chiles and plenty of fresh herbs, and is served with a mixed-herb salsa verde perked up with preserved lemon. It makes a particularly zesty main course for any large gathering. If you would rather grill the lamb, go right ahead. It will take about 12 to 17 minutes per side when grilled directly over the coals or flames.

1h 45m12 servings
North African Bean Stew With Barley and Winter Squash
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

North African Bean Stew With Barley and Winter Squash

This warming, highly spiced stew is rich in beans, grains and chunks of sweet winter squash. Feel free to substitute other grains for the barley. Farro works particularly well. If you’d prefer something soupier, thin it with a little broth or water before serving.

1h 45m8 to 10 servings
Tomato Crostata With Honey-Thyme Glaze
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Tomato Crostata With Honey-Thyme Glaze

1h6 to 8 servings
Tomato Bread Salad With Chorizo and Herbs
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Tomato Bread Salad With Chorizo and Herbs

I often make panzanella, the Italian bread and tomato salad. To give it Spanish flair, more heft and a dose of spice, I tossed in cubes of crisp cured chorizo. We ate it for dinner one night and fried up the leftovers for brunch, topped with poached eggs.

20m4 to 6 servings
Green Tomato and Lemon Marmalade
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Green Tomato and Lemon Marmalade

Here is a surprising, and quick, way to use up the green tomatoes that you couldn’t resist at the farmers’ market. Tangier, more complex and looser than most marmalades, this one offers candied slivers of fruit suspended in a thick, honeyed syrup that is just jellied enough to spread, yet runny enough to be dolloped over ice cream, or perhaps some leftover mascarpone.

45m1 3/4 cups
Five Spice
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Five Spice

At once musky and sweet, with a pronounced kick, five spice is traditionally made from equal parts cinnamon, cloves, fennel seeds, star anise and peppercorns (usually Sichuan or white). This one, adapted from Kian Lam Kho, the author of “Phoenix Claws and Jade Trees: Essential Techniques of Authentic Chinese Cooking” (Clarkson Potter, 2015), includes Sichuan peppercorns to give the mix a characteristically numbing, tingly sensation on the tongue known as mala. Once the spices are toasted and mixed, the blend can be used both whole (simmered into stews, braises and soups) and ground (added to sauces, roasted meats and vegetables). Or, stir some salt into the ground blend and use it as a piquant table condiment: It’s wonderful sprinkled on everything from barbecued meats to scrambled eggs.

5m1/4 cup ground spice blend
Skillet Irish Soda Bread Served With Cheddar and Apples
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Skillet Irish Soda Bread Served With Cheddar and Apples

Authentic Irish soda bread contains no raisins, butter or eggs. This American version is made with buttermilk, butter, eggs, raisins and sugar. It’s baked in a heavy iron skillet so that the top and bottom crusts become crunchy and browned while the center stays tender and pale, studded with treacly bits of raisins.

1h 30m1 10-inch loaf
Rosemary and Citrus Turkey for a Crowd
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Rosemary and Citrus Turkey for a Crowd

This recipe makes things easier on you if you’re feeding a crowd at Thanksgiving. Instead of roasting two birds, or a giant, hard-to-maneuver 22-pounder, borrow a trick that caterers use at large weddings. There’s the official wedding cake for show, while in the kitchen there are sheet pans full of the same cake recipe, baked into flat, easily sliceable pieces. Using the same logic, here you’ll find a recipe for one whole turkey roasted for that Norman Rockwell moment. Then, pans of easy-to-carve turkey parts are cooked in the same oven at the same time. Monitor everything carefully: The whole bird takes the longest to roast, while the parts roast in about half the time, the white meat often finishing before the dark. You will need a large roasting pan with a rack, and two 9-by-13-inch baking pans.

3h20 to 24 servings
Stuffing With Mushrooms, Leeks and Bacon
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Stuffing With Mushrooms, Leeks and Bacon

Discord swarms around the issue of stuffing. Should it be cooked in the bird or baked alongside, as dressing? White or corn bread? Firm enough to slice or soft as pudding? Call this recipe the peacemaker, because it’s adaptable enough to make everyone happy. You can use white or corn bread (and gluten-free corn bread works perfectly). The mushrooms allow vegetarians to nix the bacon without sacrificing all the flavor. We advocate baking it separately (which technically makes it dressing), but if you want to stuff the turkey, you can do that, too.

2h 30m8 to 10 servings
Whole-Wheat Crumpets With Mock Clotted Cream
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Whole-Wheat Crumpets With Mock Clotted Cream

I cheat a little with the crumpets, frying them up free-form without employing crumpet or English-muffin rings. They come out flat, like pancakes, with a deep yeasty flavor and crisp crust. Though if you like molds, try using cookie cutters: hearts, diamonds, clubs and spades give the party a very “Alice in Wonderland” feel. Hot crumpets beg for clotted cream. Traditional recipes call for simmering cream for a couple of hours in a double boiler, then removing and chilling the cream, or clot, that forms on top. I did this once, and it was delicious, though not entirely worth it since you can buy clotted cream, or make a fake, mascarpone-based version that’s just as good.

1h6 to 8 servings
Minestrone with Shell Beans and Almond Pistou
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Minestrone with Shell Beans and Almond Pistou

1h4 to 6 servings
Grilled Chile Flank Steak With Salsa
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Chile Flank Steak With Salsa

45m6 to 8 servings
Fresh Mozzarella, Tomato and Olive Pizza Pockets
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fresh Mozzarella, Tomato and Olive Pizza Pockets

The traditional reason for wrapping ingredients in pastry — be it Cornish pasties, Jamaican meat patties or even pizza pockets and knishes — is to make an edible container that facilitates transport and obviates the need for niceties like forks and plates. These pizza pockets couldn't be easier to make, and they are delicious whether eaten with a knife and fork or your fingers.

45m4 servings
Lamb and White Bean Chili
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lamb and White Bean Chili

Here is a meaty, rich, lightly spiced mix with all the heartiness of my usual chili variations, but graced with an unusual, mineral flavor from the lamb and sweetness from the white beans.

1h 15m4 to 6 servings
Zhug
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Zhug

Both deeply herby and searingly spicy, this Yemenite condiment is popular all over the Middle East, where it’s dabbed on just about everything: falafels, shawarma, grilled meats and vegetables. You can adjust the heat to suit your tolerance: Use fewer jalapeños for something more moderate, or the full amount if you like your sauces to pack a punch. This recipe leans into the earthy, bright flavor of cilantro, but using half parsley and half cilantro is equally popular if you want to vary it.

10mAbout 2 cups
Cheddar, Cucumber and Marmalade Sandwiches
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cheddar, Cucumber and Marmalade Sandwiches

Melissa Clark came up with this recipe in 2011, a sandwich for her daughter, against the one she made for herself with Branston pickle in place of the marmalade. (Branston pickle is a British pickled chutney, made with vegetables, that dates back to the early 20th century.) You can certainly make the grown-up version. But this sweet, salty, cool variety is close to perfect for lunch or a light dinner.

5m4 sandwiches
Pan-Seared Steak With Red Wine Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pan-Seared Steak With Red Wine Sauce

You can use any cut of steak, either bone-in or boneless, to make this classic French bistro dish. Steaks cut from the tenderloin, such as filet mignon, are the most tender pieces of beef, though they lack the assertively beefy chew of sirloins and rib steaks. Adding brandy to the pan sauce not only contributes flavor; its high alcohol content and acidity help extract flavor from the pan drippings. However, if setting it on fire makes you nervous, skip that step and let the brandy simmer down for an extra few minutes to cook off most of the alcohol. Make sure to open a good bottle of red wine to use in the sauce here, preferably one that you’re happy to finish off with dinner. This recipe is part of The New Essentials of French Cooking, a guide to definitive dishes every modern cook should master.

35m4 servings
Grains and Beans
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grains and Beans

A play on Southern red beans and rice, this is a spicy, filling and highly nutritious dish. To make this meat-free, leave out the bacon, or substitute sliced mushrooms fried in olive oil for depth of flavor. But do use the hot sauce, preferably one with a vinegar bite to brighten up the dense heartiness of beans and grains.

2h6 servings
Grilled Skirt Steak With Garlic and Herbs
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Skirt Steak With Garlic and Herbs

Grilling might just be the best way to cook up a skirt steak. The intense heat gives the succulent and flavorful cut a rich char that’s smoky and crisp at the edges. The trick is to get the fire hot enough and dry off any marinade before placing the meat on the grill. This will give you the deepest sear. Here, the meat is marinated in a garlicky herb paste flecked with pickled pepperoncini chiles. Other pickled peppers will work, too, so feel free to substitute pickled jalapeños if that’s what you’ve got. Or use a fresh jalapeño and a dash of pickle juice to get a similar hot and vinegary punch. Lastly, be sure not to overcook the meat. Rare to medium rare guarantees tender beef.

1h8 servings