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1474 recipes found

Bass Steaks With Basil-Pepper Compote

Green Bean and Fava Bean Salad With Walnuts
Skinning the fava beans for this summer salad does require a little effort, but you're left with a bright green, healthy salad. Walnuts, toast them or don't, add crunch and the dressing adds zing.

Bass Fillets Baked With Ginger and Sesame Oil

Summer Squash and Red Rice Salad With Lemon and Dill
During the hot summer months, cook rice in double batches so that you’ll have it on hand for refreshing whole-grain salads. I like to mold this in a ramekin.

Asparagus Salad With Hard-Boiled Eggs
A classic Italian salad, there are many versions of this dish. Sometimes the asparagus are not cut up, just topped with chopped hard-boiled eggs and vinaigrette. I like to cut them into pieces and toss everything together.

Bass Fillets Broiled With Mustard Mayonnaise

Bass Steaks in Rosemary-Sherry Vinaigrette

Cranberry Beans With Tomatoes and Herbs

Spicy Pork

Cold Poached Pacific Cod with Spices
If you use a whole fish, you can use the bones to make a fish stock for poaching. But fillets can also be poached in a lighter broth. They are rubbed with a Middle Eastern spice mix.

Mackerel With Peas

Pork Tenderloin With Pears and Ginger-Beer Sauce

Bean And Shrimp Salad

Cold Steamed Petrale Sole with Uncooked Tomato Sauce

Stir-Fried Turkey Breast With Snap or Snow Peas and Chard
Turkey cutlets are easy to prep and cook quickly, and young snap peas can be almost as tender as the more traditional snow peas for stir-fries. Shopping for ingredients for this week’s recipes in my farmers’ market, I found young, tender snap peas that were almost as delicate as snow peas. I had part of a bunch of Swiss chard and used both vegetables. I like using turkey breast cutlets in stir-fries; they’ve already been cut to a uniform thickness, so all you need to do is slice them across the grain to get even pieces that cook in minutes.

Soused Mackerel With Arabic Spices

Seared Sea Scallops With Fried Onions

Oven-Roasted Mussels With Fresh Spinach
Mussels don’t have to be steamed. They will pop open in a hot, dry cast iron skillet on a grill or in the oven. In this dish they are first tossed with garlic, olive oil and wine, then roasted along with the marinade in a pan in a hot oven. You may have to do this in batches, depending on the size of your skillet or baking dish. I like to use cast iron or enameled cast iron. This particular recipe is inspired by one in "The Mozza Cookbook," by Nancy Silverton. Served over a generous bed of steamed spinach, this is a beautiful dish. If you have leftovers, remove the mussels from the shells, chop the spinach and toss with pasta.

Seared Sea Scallops With Tomatoes and Onions

Joan Nathan's Haroseth
The Jewish food maven Joan Nathan serves this haroseth at her family's Passover gatherings. More than any other Jewish dish, this sweet blend of fruit and nuts — a mixture that symbolizes the mortar with which the Israelites laid bricks during their enslavement in Egypt — varies wildly depending on the availability of ingredients. The Nathan family version resembles a Moroccan haroseth rather than the popular American version made with apples, nuts and sweet wine.

Spicy Stir-Fried Collard Greens With Red or Green Cabbage
Collard greens don’t have the cachet of popular greens like black kale and rainbow chard. This is probably because collards have a stronger flavor and tougher leaf than many other greens. They do stand up to longer cooking, but they don’t require it. In this stir-fry, they stood in for more traditional greens like Chinese broccoli or bok choy and cooked up crunchy. As a bonus, collards are a great source of calcium. According to the Harvard School of Public Health, a cup of cooked collard greens has more calcium than a glass of skim milk.

Mackerel With Mediterranean Vegetables

Masala Vangi (Eggplant Slices Smothered With Coconut-Spice Paste)
