Citrus

1591 recipes found

Moist Gingerbread Cake With Lemon Glaze
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Moist Gingerbread Cake With Lemon Glaze

This dark, deeply moist, gingered beauty was created by Karen DeMasco, the pastry chef at Locanda Verde in New York. Beer and coffee add complexity, and the tangy lemon glaze counters the sweetness.

1h 15m8 servings
Lime Soup (Sopa De Lima)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lime Soup (Sopa De Lima)

45m4 to 6 servings
Grilled Leg of Lamb With Spicy Lime Yogurt Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Leg of Lamb With Spicy Lime Yogurt Sauce

Leg of lamb is elegant, and one leg can feed a crowd. Marinate it with a garlicky herb paste, the longer the better. Overnight in the refrigerator is ideal, but even a few hours at room temperature will help. Just make sure to always pat your lamb dry after marinating; this helps eliminate flare-ups. Butterflied legs of lamb tend to be unevenly cut, giving you thicker and thinner parts. This is good if some of your guests like their lamb more well done than you do, but problematic if everyone likes it rare. If you want rare all around (or well done for that matter), consider cutting the lamb into pieces according to thickness so you can take the thinner ones off the grill first.

45m12 to 15 servings
Eddie’s Remarkable Ribs
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Eddie’s Remarkable Ribs

1h 30mfour to six servings
Citrusy Brisket With Spring Lettuces
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Citrusy Brisket With Spring Lettuces

This is a bright, zesty take on braised brisket, in which the meat is cooked with lemon and orange juice, along with plenty of onions and dry white wine. It makes for a lighter-tasting sauce than the standard rich, brown gravy, with a tangy, citrus flavor. For serving, the tender slices of meat are topped with a crisp herb salad, adding even more freshness to the plate. Serve it with mashed or roasted potatoes to soak up all the caramelized, oniony juices.

3h 30m8 to 10 servings
Potato-and-Radicchio Tart
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Potato-and-Radicchio Tart

This recipe for a satisfying savory tart is adapted from the pastry chef Natasha Pickowicz, who makes endless variations on the dish, building it in up in thoughtful layers. You can play with the format, too, swapping out the ingredients based on what you have on hand. Start with a cold pâte brisée, then go from there: Spread a fine layer of cheese such as ricotta or mascarpone, then season it with lemon zest, salt and pepper. Now move onto a denser layer of cooked vegetables, such as cauliflower, potato, leek or squash, lightly seasoned with olive oil, salt and pepper. Fill the gaps in the vegetables with pieces of cheese. When the tart comes out of the oven, consider a topping of herbs, lightly dressed salad leaves or even a couple of fried eggs.

3h 30m1 10-inch tart.
Herbed Compound Butter
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Herbed Compound Butter

A compound butter — a stick of butter seasoned with herbs, lemon and garlic or shallots — is one of the most versatile things to keep on hand. You can store it in the freezer, then slice it whenever you want to add herby richness to a dish. Use it on steak, fish, chicken or even mashed or roasted sweet potatoes. And feel free to vary the herbs to suit your taste. For a kick, a pinch or two of chile powder or a drizzle of hot sauce would do the trick. This recipe is part of The New Essentials of French Cooking, a guide to definitive dishes every modern cook should master.

10m8 servings
Pyaz Ka Laccha (Raw Onion Relish)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pyaz Ka Laccha (Raw Onion Relish)

These floppy, lightly pickled onions are a traditional accompaniment to grilled and tandoor foods throughout India and the rest of South Asia. There are different versions depending on the region, but all are seasoned with salt, spiked with chile (either powdered or fresh) and brightened with some kind of acid, usually lemon juice or vinegar. This recipe, adapted from “Madhur Jaffrey's Indian Cooking” (Barron’s, 1983), uses a combination of sweet paprika and cayenne for an earthy, nuanced flavor, and you can add the spices to taste, making this as fiery or mild as you like. Soaking the onion slices in water before mixing the relish helps soften their sharpness, but you can skip this step if you prefer a stronger onion flavor.

55m2 cups
Creamy Avocado-Miso Dressing
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Creamy Avocado-Miso Dressing

Whip up this quick dressing when you want to use up any ripe or slightly overripe avocado that’s too soft for slicing. The miso gives the creamy dressing a delicately sweet complexity, and the lemon and vinegar cut through the buttery avocado. Use this protein-rich dressing to generously coat your hearty green salad, warm grain bowl or vegetables charred on the grill.

5m1 cup
Brown Corduroy
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Brown Corduroy

Two cocktails
Tuna-Stuffed Piquillo Peppers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Tuna-Stuffed Piquillo Peppers

Bright red piquillo peppers from Spain come packed in a tin or jar. The little peppers are roasted and peeled, ready to be used. They can have any number of fillings, but tuna (high-quality tinned tuna) is a clear favorite. Tapas bars often have them stuffed with garlicky salt cod or slices of sheep’s milk cheese.

20m4 to 6 servings
Cara Cara Citrus Liqueur
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cara Cara Citrus Liqueur

This homemade liqueur is the perfect addition to many a beachy cocktail, served in frosty glasses and sipped on a porch at sunset. The margarita, the Cosmopolitan and the ever-dangerous Lemon Drop are all made more refreshing by its bright citrus flavor. Given all the types of citrus available, and the simplicity of this recipe, it’s worth experimenting. The recipe here provides the essentials (ratios and techniques) with permission to make the infusion your own.

30m1 1/2 quarts
Candied Kumquats or Meyer Lemons
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Candied Kumquats or Meyer Lemons

1h1 to 1 1/2 pints
Bean and Green Herb Stew
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Bean and Green Herb Stew

This is inspired by a famous Persian stew that is traditionally made with chicken and kidney beans. I came across a vegetarian rendition of the stew in Louisa Shafia’s wonderful new book, “The New Persian Kitchen.” Louisa uses tofu in her stew; I’m just focusing on the beans, herbs and spinach.It’s crucial to cook red kidney beans thoroughly, because they contain a naturally occurring toxin called phytohemagglutinin that causes extreme intestinal distress but is reduced to harmless levels when the beans are boiled for a sufficient amount of time (10 minutes is sufficient, according to the Food and Drug Administration, but of course beans require a lot more cooking than that to soften). You should not cook them in a crockpot because the temperature may not be high enough to destroy the toxin, and you should discard the soaking water.

2h 30m4 servings
Grilled Sea Scallops With Yellow Beets, Cucumbers and Lime
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Sea Scallops With Yellow Beets, Cucumbers and Lime

Here’s a simple bright dish that’s nearly effortless to put together. You make a sort of salad-like relish with onion, cucumber and golden beet, seasoned with ginger and lime juice. Once the scallops are grilled, you spoon the relish over and drizzle with fruity olive oil, along with a shower of chopped sweet herbs. Done and done. If sea scallops are not available, use wild shrimp or halibut or salmon fillets. It is best to cook and cool the beets in advance (even a day ahead).

1h 30m4 to 6 servings
Warm Fig and Chocolate Sponge Cake
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Warm Fig and Chocolate Sponge Cake

This dessert is somewhere between a sponge cake and a clafoutis: light and airy, yet rich from the addition of dark chocolate and rum. Make sure you use really ripe, in-season figs, as they make all the difference here. The figs release their juices with the caramel, rum and orange to create a sauce that is perfect to scoop over the sponge cake when serving. For a more concentrated flavor, roast your figs separately before adding them to the caramel. A spoonful of crème fraîche is all you need here, but you could serve this with some vanilla ice cream, if you’re looking for a supertreat.

1h4 servings
Lime-Sugar Dipping Salt
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lime-Sugar Dipping Salt

A simple combination of sugar, salt and grated lime zest, this innovative sweet and savory citrus mix is excellent sprinkled on pork chops, chicken or salmon before roasting, or used as a seasoning for raw vegetables or corn on the cob. It’s also wonderful tossed with a little chile powder for added heat. To serve, place in a bowl or ramekin and serve with a demitasse or other small spoon for sprinkling. Or arrange vegetables on a platter and sprinkle with lime salt before serving.

5m3/4 cup
Rhubarb Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Rhubarb Sauce

This jewel-bright rhubarb sauce has as many uses as a Swiss Army knife. Glossy and sweet-tart, it tastes fabulous in iced coffee, cocktails and other mixed drinks, and is especially welcome over vanilla ice cream. The optional vanilla bean adds musky warmth that extract does not, so skip it completely — don’t substitute — if not using. With this recipe, you get two goodies: the sauce of course, and the strained fruit that remains, which is great draped over yogurt in the morning or spread onto a slice of buttered toast.

1h 20m1 cup
Grilled Swiss-Chard Stems With Roasted Garlic Oil
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Swiss-Chard Stems With Roasted Garlic Oil

Don’t throw all those Swiss-chard stems away. Not everyone is a fan of including them with sautéed greens, but here’s a plan for the rest of us who love their texture and flavor. Prepare to blanch, blister and then dress these stems in an intense garlic oil. With a little lemon and salt to perk the taste buds, you’ve got a new favorite side dish.

30mServes 8
Citrus Marmalade
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Citrus Marmalade

It's decidedly more involved than your average preserves, but homemade marmalade is worth the effort. High amounts of natural pectin, acid and bitterness make citrus fruits (namely oranges, lemons and grapefruits) ideal for preserving. And there are many paths to a satisfying result: Some recipes call for boiling the whole fruit until it's tender, then slicing it before simmering it again in a sugar syrup for a very thick, nearly opaque marmalade. Others use only the peel and juice, discarding the insides for a crystal-clear result. Our recipe takes a third tack, using the whole fruit, separated with some savvy knife skills for a marmalade that lands somewhere between the other two. Perhaps the best part of making your own marmalade is the ability to control the texture of your final product. Do you prefer a thick-cut marmalade? Or one with a more uniform, delicate texture? No matter your answer, be sure to soak the sliced peels for at least eight hours to allow them to fully soften, or else they might become tough — more candied peel than evenly cooked preserves.

2hAbout 4 cups (4 8-ounce jars)
Lemon Drizzle Cake
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lemon Drizzle Cake

This light and moist lemon poundcake has a crunchy sugar glaze that crystallizes on top, giving a contrasting texture to the soft crumb underneath. It’s an easy-to-make, crowd-pleasing cake that’s excellent on its own but takes well to embellishments. A scoop of ice cream or sorbet, fruit compote and-or lemon curd are all wonderful alongside.

45m24 servings
Chicken Rice With Shallot Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chicken Rice With Shallot Sauce

This rendition of chicken rice, where the chicken is delicately poached with aromatics then served at room temperature, is common throughout Southeast Asia and parts of China, but every family is likely to have a slightly different technique. This recipe is from 93-year-old Nancy Fam of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, who used to offer a whole poached chicken, with its head and feet still attached, as part of an elaborate altar ritual for deceased family members. After the spirits had been satiated, she’d carve up the chicken and serve it to the living, paired with a dipping sauce made with shallots, lime and ground bean sauce (a fermented soybean paste), a recipe she inherited from her late mother. A celebration of family both present and past, the chicken is served at room temperature, but eaten with a piping hot serving of jasmine rice.

1h 30m4 servings
Betty Talmadge's country barbecue sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Betty Talmadge's country barbecue sauce

5mAbout four cups
Goat Cheese Ice Cream With Fennel, Lemon and Honey
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Goat Cheese Ice Cream With Fennel, Lemon and Honey

Very popular a few years ago, goat cheese ice cream deserves bringing back to the fore. The goat cheese supplies a tang similar to the flavor of cheesecake. Layer the honey into the ice cream mixture after it has churned. Blueberries make a nice accompaniment. For peace of mind, make the ice cream one day before serving.

5h 30m4 to 6 servings