Cheese

2192 recipes found

Mexican Vegetables
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Mexican Vegetables

20m2 servings
Pumpkin Skillet Cake With Cream Cheese Frosting
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pumpkin Skillet Cake With Cream Cheese Frosting

Fall in simple skillet cake form, this easy pumpkin cake that can be made in one bowl. The frosting is fluffier and comes together more quickly with the help of an electric mixer, but it can be mixed by hand in a pinch. It's also great without a drop of frosting.

40m8 to 10 servings
Polenta, Corn and Cheese
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Polenta, Corn and Cheese

15m2 servings
Potato and Cheese Patties
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Potato and Cheese Patties

1h12 patties, about 4 servings
Laurie Colwin’s Creamed Spinach With Jalapeño Peppers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Laurie Colwin’s Creamed Spinach With Jalapeño Peppers

This recipe is from the celebrated food writer Laurie Colwin, and in some ways it is quintessentially hers. There’s the delicious richness of the dish, its unfussiness and nostalgic value. There is the constant awareness of the plight of the busy home cook, those who would just as soon use a package of frozen spinach if the results are just as good as if you washed and chopped an untold number of bunches of fresh spinach yourself. And there is a twist: the jalapeños, which are a preventative measure against the gloppy blandness of steakhouse creamed spinach, adding sharpness to the dish but not too much heat. You can use either fresh or pickled jalapeños here — the latter add nice zing — and panko bread crumbs are a good substitution for fresh if you don’t have them (or a few pieces of stale bread) in the pantry. (The New York Times)

1h 10m8 servings
Stuffed Peppers (Chiles Rellenos)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Stuffed Peppers (Chiles Rellenos)

40m3 or 4 servings
Quesadilla With Mushroom Ragoût and Chipotles
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Quesadilla With Mushroom Ragoût and Chipotles

Mushroom ragoût accepts chipotles willingly. I made a delicious and substantial quesadilla dinner with the ragoût, two tortillas and a bit of cheese in under three minutes.

10m2 quesadillas
Fresh Tomato Sauce For Fettuccine
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fresh Tomato Sauce For Fettuccine

18m4 servings
Savory Spiced Carrot Cake
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Savory Spiced Carrot Cake

This carrot cake is not a dessert, though at first glance it looks like one. Whimsical and festive, it could even be a birthday cake for someone lacking a sweet tooth. Serve it as a first course, or pair it with a salad for a light meal.

1h6 to 8 servings
Fettuccine With Broccoli-Pepper Cheese Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fettuccine With Broccoli-Pepper Cheese Sauce

25m3 servings
Spaghetti With Parmesan Cheese
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Spaghetti With Parmesan Cheese

15m4 servings
Creamy Fettuccine
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Creamy Fettuccine

35m2 servings
Grilled Bread Topped With Celery Heart And Goat Cheese
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Bread Topped With Celery Heart And Goat Cheese

15mFour servings
Fettuccine With Brussels Sprouts, Lemon and Ricotta
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fettuccine With Brussels Sprouts, Lemon and Ricotta

Brussels sprouts love a whisper of lemon, which is what the zest provides in this combo. The ricotta becomes creamy when you add a small amount of cooking water from the pasta to it, but you have to serve this right away or the ricotta will stiffen up again. I used gluten free Le Veneziane fettuccine made with cornmeal, and thought the color and texture were very good. It only took 5 to 6 minutes to cook. It works equally well with standard pasta.

20mServes 4
Linguine With Creamy Arugula and Goat Cheese
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Linguine With Creamy Arugula and Goat Cheese

20m2 servings
Grilled Chicken Breast With Black Beans And Goat Cheese Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Chicken Breast With Black Beans And Goat Cheese Sauce

2h 15mFour servings
Cheesy Kimchi Noodles
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cheesy Kimchi Noodles

Instant ramen ranks highly among comfort foods because it can be quickly prepared and those little seasoning packets provide lots of flavor with minimal effort. No packets are used in this recipe, but the addition of gooey, melted Cheddar and funky fermented kimchi makes the dish even more satisfying. Sautéed scallions and garlic balance out the spicy Sriracha, soy and sesame sauce, while the runny yolk from a crispy fried egg adds richness and mellows the spice. The cheese becomes sticky as it cools, so these noodles are best served immediately while still warm and glossy.

20m2 servings
Kimchi Carbonara
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Kimchi Carbonara

The chef Melanie Hye Jin Meyer is constantly researching Korean foodways to create dishes for her Korean-inspired pop-up restaurant Tiny Chef in St. Louis. Kimchi carbonara, which she was seeing all over Korean TikTok, spoke to her. “I love how Korea somewhat recently started introducing cheese on everything,” Ms. Meyer said. “I’m all for it, especially being from the Midwest.” This is her take on the cultural mashup as a Korean adoptee. She cooks down napa cabbage kimchi until soft, and cuts through the buttery base with white wine. The dish comes together quickly, so have everything prepped and ready to go before starting the sauce.

25m4 servings
Mushroom-Farro Soup With Parmesan Broth
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Mushroom-Farro Soup With Parmesan Broth

This dish is layered in earthiness and umami thanks to its ingredient list: farro, dried and fresh mushrooms, shallots and Parmesan broth. Farro is a rustic grain, hearty enough to maintain its integrity and stand up to a long simmer. Similar to arborio rice, pearled farro readily releases its starch as it cooks, thickening the broth and marrying the ingredients in a blissful union. A pinch of fennel pollen at the end is a classy move, though absolutely not mandatory.

1h 30m4 to 6 servings
Asparagus With Goat Cheese Dressing
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Asparagus With Goat Cheese Dressing

20m4 servings
Vegetarian Chili With Corn Bread Topping
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Vegetarian Chili With Corn Bread Topping

The idea behind this spicy, all-vegetable chili is ease: It’s easily made on a weekend, a meditative wintry afternoon in the kitchen, chopping and stirring. Then, on a weeknight made even shorter by commuting and homework, concoct an easy corn bread topping, spread it on the chili and bake it for a while. It’s healthy, filling food.

1h 35m8 servings
Arugula Salad With Peaches, Goat Cheese and Basil
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Arugula Salad With Peaches, Goat Cheese and Basil

This simple, quintessential summer salad is a reminder that seasonal ingredients at their very best don’t need much fussing (or much cooking at all, in this case). Here, peppery arugula and earthy goat cheese get brightened with juicy summer peaches, but the recipe can be tweaked to suit all seasons: If you can’t find ripe peaches, you can use cherries, strawberries, plums, raspberries or even cherry tomatoes in their place.

10m4 servings
Greek Skillet Pies With Feta and Greens
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Greek Skillet Pies With Feta and Greens

The Greek cookbook author Aglaia Kremezi has no problem making phyllo dough at home whenever she makes anything pie-like. With a little practice, anyone can do it. For these simple skillet pies, she recommends grilling them in an iron stovetop ridged pan or on a grate over coals. Filled with feta and herbs, these flat thin-crust pies give a new meaning to grilled pizza.

1h12 small pies
Pastry Nests With Poached Pears and Feta and Saffron Cream
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pastry Nests With Poached Pears and Feta and Saffron Cream

These pastry nests may look rather composed and restaurant-like, but don’t be put off. It’s just a case of making the various elements separately; a day in advance, if you like, in the case of the pears (which benefit from being soaked overnight in the syrup) and the kataifi pastry bases (which can be baked one day ahead; let them cool, then keep them in a sealed container at room temperature). That leaves just the cream to whip, the syrup to reduce and the assembly to do before serving. The joy of calling something a nest is that it does not need to look perfectly neat and intact. A stray strand of pastry here and there is absolutely fine. Kataifi pastry can be found in the freezer section at Middle Eastern supermarkets.

1h8 servings