Beef

869 recipes found

Whole Brisket With Tomato Gravy
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Apr 12, 2006

Whole Brisket With Tomato Gravy

4h8 to 10 servings
Maple-Glazed Meatloaf
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Mar 22, 2006

Maple-Glazed Meatloaf

A mixture of maple syrup and Dijon mustard coats this hearty meatloaf of beef, pork and veal.

2h6 to 8 servings
Tteokmanduguk (Rice Cake Soup With Dumplings)
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Jan 25, 2006

Tteokmanduguk (Rice Cake Soup With Dumplings)

Korean New Year, Solnal, is greeted with steaming bowls of rice cake soup called tteokguk - "comfort food," said Moon Sun Kwak, who serves it at Dok Suni and Do Hwa, her family's restaurants in Manhattan. Her mother, Myung Ja Kwak, who is the chef, slowly simmers beef bones into a marrow-rich broth as the base for the soup. "It's so healthy," the elder Ms. Kwak said as she dropped homemade dumplings into the soup in Do Hwa's kitchen. Not all versions of the soup have dumplings; it's the tteok, or rice cakes, that matter. "You eat it so you can turn a year older."

2h4 to 6 servings
Seared Steak
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Dec 7, 2005

Seared Steak

For "grilling" a steak indoors, a cast iron pan really can't be beat. Cast iron can withstand super high heat, and it distributes that heat evenly, meaning you get a perfect brown crust that seals in the meat's juices. You don't need much in the way of seasoning; just a generous sprinkle of salt and freshly ground black pepper. A standard cast iron pan works great for this, or if you like the look of grill marks, get your hands on a ridged cast-iron grill pan.

55m4 servings
Cuban Pork Tenderloin With Chimichurri Sauce
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Jul 10, 2005

Cuban Pork Tenderloin With Chimichurri Sauce

1h 15mServes 4
Meat Club Rub
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Mar 13, 2005

Meat Club Rub

5mServes 4
Beef Stew With Sweet and Hot Paprika
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Mar 9, 2005

Beef Stew With Sweet and Hot Paprika

After a tasting session focusing on Priorat wines back in 2005, Florence Fabricant was looking for a meal pairing that could stand up to the wines’ heft. She found what she was looking for in a beef stew featured in "Italian Slow and Savory" by Joyce Goldstein. She adapted it by swapping the stew meat for short ribs, and cooking it in a Dutch oven or heavy casserole, but if a tagine is available to you, that also works. “If you use a tagine for the recipe, it must be a large one, about 17 inches in diameter,” Florence writes. “For a smaller one, 12 to 14 inches, you can make the dish to serve four, reducing the quantities of ingredients by one-third.”

3h6 servings
Herb-Poached Tenderloin With Barolo Sauce
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Oct 6, 2004

Herb-Poached Tenderloin With Barolo Sauce

30m4 servings
Chris Gesualdi’s Sloppy Joes
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Oct 9, 2002

Chris Gesualdi’s Sloppy Joes

Some foods are memory triggers, meals that send you back to long-forgotten moments in your life. The sloppy Joe sandwich is one such time machine. This version is an adaptation of one developed by Chris Gesualdi, the chef at TriBakery in Manhattan. It's a tribute to the one his mother, Rose, used to make for him as a child, and it is perfect: a sweet and spicy hill of thick sautéed ground beef spilling out of a toasted homemade kaiser roll. He tops his with melted cheddar, and that can't be a bad thing. All in all, it is a terrific antidote to adulthood.

1h 20m12 servings
Thai Beef Salad With Lemongrass Dressing
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Oct 6, 2002

Thai Beef Salad With Lemongrass Dressing

10m1 serving
Rigatoni With White Bolognese
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Feb 17, 2002

Rigatoni With White Bolognese

White Bolognese, a meat sauce made without tomato, is a variation you rarely see in America.

1h4 servings
Aunt Nora's Mock Lobster
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Dec 9, 2001

Aunt Nora's Mock Lobster

1h8 servings
Old-Fashioned Beef Stew
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Jan 30, 1994

Old-Fashioned Beef Stew

This classic stick-to-your-ribs stew is the ideal project for a chilly weekend. Beef, onion, carrots, potatoes and red wine come together in cozy harmony. If you are feeding a crowd, good news: It doubles (or triples) beautifully. For additional variations on the recipe, you might also enjoy this video. Keys to This Recipe How to Make Beef Stew: Beef stew is made in different ways across cultures, but at its core, it is simply tough cuts of meat slowly cooked with vegetables in liquid. Over hours of simmering, all the flavors meld together and the ingredients soften to tenderness. How to Thicken Beef Stew: Starches, like the flour and potato in this recipe, thicken beef stew. Here, beef cubes are coated in flour, then browned, leaving flour in the pan while sealing flour to the meat. When the meat is later simmered, that flour thickens the liquid as do potatoes, which release their starches as they cook. How to Make Beef Stew on the Stove: It's important to cook stew slowly over low heat. High heat will cause the meat to tighten and toughen, while low heat allows the meat to become fall-apart tender. Simply cover the pot and keep the heat as low as it goes. What to Serve With Beef Stew: The best accompaniments to beef stew can soak up the sauce. A crusty baguette works well, as does rice. A beef stew is hearty enough to be a one-pot meal, but you can make a salad with some crisp, fresh vegetables.

2h 45m4 servings
Grilled Marinated Swordfish Steaks
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Sep 15, 1993

Grilled Marinated Swordfish Steaks

Swordfish, with its firm, lean flesh, is an ideal candidate for grilling. It's not as forgiving as some fatty fish, like tuna and black sea bass, so proceed with caution. If you remove the fish from the fire when the center is still slightly pink, by the time it gets to the table it should be cooked through. A quick marinade of soy sauce, red wine vinegar, rosemary, garlic, coriander and cumin pairs beautifully with the meatiness of the fish, but do not marinate for more than 10 to 15 minutes, or the acid will break down the flesh and leave it mushy (or the flavor will overpower the fish). If you don't have a grill, this works equally well in a broiler. Serve this alongside a colorful pile of Pierre Franey’s green bean and tomato salad. It's a meal you'll never forget. (The Monterey Bay Aquarium's seafood watch list provides up-to-date information on sustainable seafood options here.) Why You Should Trust This Recipe The celebrated French chef Pierre Franey first created this recipe in 1993, and it remains the most popular swordfish recipe on New York Times Cooking. After a career in noted fine-dining kitchens, he began writing The Times’s “60-Minute Gourmet” column in 1976, teaching home cooks how to simply and quickly prepare restaurant-quality dishes.

30m4 servings
Basic Texas Meat Loaf
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Feb 3, 1991

Basic Texas Meat Loaf

1hFour to six servings
Goulash Soup
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Oct 3, 1990

Goulash Soup

45m8 to 10 servings
Chili-Stuffed Steak
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Apr 25, 1990

Chili-Stuffed Steak

1h 16m4 servings
Pork Tenderloin With Sweet And Hot Mustard
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Dec 13, 1989

Pork Tenderloin With Sweet And Hot Mustard

30m12 servings
Anise Beef
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Oct 15, 1989

Anise Beef

2h 30m10 to 16 servings
Sauerbraten
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Oct 1, 1989

Sauerbraten

2h 20m4 to 6 servings
Classic Sloppy Joes
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Jul 26, 1989

Classic Sloppy Joes

This simple version of sloppy Joes, the classic sandwich served in school cafeterias and at kitchen counters across the country, comes together in about 20 minutes and can be made with ground beef, chicken or turkey. As the name suggests, they are messy, so serve with a fork and plenty of napkins.

22m6 servings
Sorrel Soup With Hard-Boiled Eggs
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Jun 7, 1989

Sorrel Soup With Hard-Boiled Eggs

3h 10m6 servings
Zrazy Zawijane (Stuffed rolls of beef)
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Jun 7, 1989

Zrazy Zawijane (Stuffed rolls of beef)

2h 55m6 servings
Brotchan Roy
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Mar 15, 1989

Brotchan Roy

Brotchan roy, a thick broth, is an old Dublin favorite traditionally served with Irish soda bread.

50m4 servings