Cooking 101

8 recipes found

Olive Oil and Honey-Miso Dressing
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Aug 18, 2025

Olive Oil and Honey-Miso Dressing

This is one of those dressings that somehow ends up on everything. It starts with a base of white miso, olive oil and mustard — and it’s creamy, tangy and just a little sweet thanks to honey. It’s meant for blanched green beans, but don’t stop there: Toss it with boiled and drained ramen noodles for a cold noodle situation; smother torn roasted sweet potatoes with it; or drizzle it over a crunchy pile of sliced cucumbers. You’ll find more ways to use this dressing than you expect.

10mAbout 1½ cups 
Olive Oil and Chile-Fried Eggs
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Aug 18, 2025

Olive Oil and Chile-Fried Eggs

This is less of a recipe and more of a trick — one that ends with a deeply savory, spicy red oil you’ll want to pour over everything. The eggs are fried in olive oil until the whites puff and crisp around the edges, then you scoot them to the side and let sliced garlic, smoked paprika and chile sizzle in the oil. What you’re left with is a garlicky, brick-red oil that stains the eggs and perfumes your kitchen in the best way. Eat the eggs straight from the pan, spoon them over a bowl of yogurt with flatbread for a savory breakfast, or serve over a bowl of rice and top it with herbs and pickles — whatever you've got. That spicy oil makes the dish, and you’ll want to save every last drop.

10m2 to 4 servings 
Olive Oil-Poached Tuna With Garlic Aioli 
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Aug 18, 2025

Olive Oil-Poached Tuna With Garlic Aioli 

This is one of those recipes that feels luxurious without trying too hard. You slowly poach tuna, swordfish or halibut in a big bath of olive oil that’s been infused with lemon peels, garlic, thyme and chiles — basically, everything you want to be eating. Use a good everyday extra-virgin olive oil here, nothing too precious because you’ll be using a lot of it. (The leftover seasoned oil is gold; you can save it for roasting potatoes or sautéing greens.) As it poaches in the oil, the fish turns silky and rich, while the onion and chile soften and take on the deeply savory flavor of the oil. The best part? You use that same oil to make an aioli, which pulls everything together. 

40m4 servings 
Diner Burgers
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Jul 24, 2025

Diner Burgers

These are the kind of big, beefy, no-nonsense, cooked-on-a-flattop burger you find at places like J.G. Melon in New York City or Mr. Bartley’s Burger Cottage in Cambridge, Mass. These burgers emphasize crustiness and juiciness, and skipping the grill in lieu of a pan or flattop means there’s no smoky overshadowing of the pure beefiness.

10m4 burgers
Thick Backyard Burgers
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Jul 18, 2025

Thick Backyard Burgers

The key to the best backyard burgers is using freshly ground beef with around 20 percent fat content. Handling the beef as little as possible — just enough that the patties don’t fall apart on the grill — optimizes texture, delivering juicy, tender patties loaded with pockets of rendered juices and fat. Rather than lifting the meat into my hands, it can be helpful to shape patties on a sheet of parchment paper to minimize handling.

10m4 burgers
Creamy Lemon-Miso Dressing
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Jun 26, 2025

Creamy Lemon-Miso Dressing

If I were a singer-songwriter, I would write a power ballad about my love for Kismet Rotisserie in Los Angeles. The shoebox-size, mostly takeout restaurant serves the kind of food I’d eat every day if I lived in the neighborhood: golden roast chicken, fluffy pita and perfectly seasoned side dishes piled high with vegetables. But what I love most are its sauces and dressings. Especially its miso-poppy seed dressing, which I set out to re-create a couple of years ago. At some point, though, my journey took a detour, landing me here with this recipe from my book, “Good Things” (Random House, 2025), at what just might be my new favorite all-purpose dressing. Tangy, sweet, creamy and rounded out with umami, it manages to hit every note you could want in a dressing without being cloying. Add some poppy seeds for classic flavor or leave them out to make the dressing more versatile for drizzling over roasted vegetables, in potato salad or anywhere else you can imagine.

15mAbout 2 cups
House Dressing
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Jun 26, 2025

House Dressing

This perfect vinaigrette recipe comes from Via Carota, the charming West Village restaurant run by Jody Williams and Rita Sodi. Since I first wrote about this recipe, it’s become indispensable not only for me but also for my entire Culinary Brain Trust, who now simply call it House Dressing. This version comes from my book, “Good Things” (Random House, 2025). The warm water in this recipe might surprise you. “We add warm water to make it more palatable,” Ms. Williams said. “Pure vinegar is just too strong — it assaults the taste buds. We want a salad dressing so savory and delicious that you can eat spoonfuls of it. We want you to be able to drink it!” Drizzle this liberally over everything: boiled asparagus, farro salad, steak, fish or roast chicken. And if you don’t have both types of mustard on hand, just use twice as much of whichever you do have.

10m1 1/2 cups
Creamy Sesame-Ginger Dressing
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Jun 26, 2025

Creamy Sesame-Ginger Dressing

This is the recipe that inspired my book, “Good Things” (Random House, 2025), and my entire palate still puckers with pleasure every time I make it. After I’ve balanced and adjusted the flavors and dipped a bit of lettuce or cabbage into the dressing for a final taste, I always marvel at the way it manages to take every element — salt, acid, umami, fiery ginger, garlic and spice — right to the edge . . . without stepping over.

15m1 1/2 cups