Dairy-Free
1474 recipes found

Whole-Grain Pasta With Mushrooms, Asparagus and Favas
Pasta companies have made great strides when it comes to whole-grain pasta. On the small scale, Community Grains in Northern California is producing some excellent pasta with its amazing whole-wheat flour, and on the larger commercial scale, companies like Barilla are selling better and better products. I used Barilla penne for this springtime mix.

Oven-Roasted Oysters
In New York, as in most North American cities these days, oysters are relatively plentiful, whether they're harvested locally or flown in from afar. Open space for lighting bonfires, however, is in decidedly short supply, so we set about adapting the oyster roast's winning combination of extreme informality and indulgence to a city setting.

Multigrain Seed Bread

Crostini With Eggplant And Pine Nut Purée

Roasted Brussels Sprouts With Pistachios and Cipollini Onions

Peaches Poached In Red Wine With Pepper

Joan Fontaine's Creole Fish Gumbo

Cherry Sorbet With Tarragon

Champagne Granita With Strawberries

Halibut Ceviche With Jalapeño and Parsley

Mandarin Rice Stuffing With Chestnuts and Shiitake Mushrooms
The brown rice is cooked in vegetable broth to infuse it with more flavor. It needs to be cooked in advance and chilled before stir-frying. Hot rice is too moist to stir-fry and results in gummy rice. You can buy cooked chestnuts in a jar, but I prefer the taste of fresh roasted chestnuts.

Piperade (Saute of peppers, onions and tomatoes)
REGIONAL inspirations and influences have always had their place on French menus, but with an increased interest in vegetables, country dishes such as piperade - a vegetable dish from the Basque region of France - are showing up in various guises. While the classic piperade often appears with scrambled eggs and country ham, Alain Dutournier of Au Trou Gascon of Paris recently served a more elegant molded version as a vegetable side dish to rabbit. The rabbit was sauteed and covered with thin slices of spicy- hot green peppers. Other regional vegetable inspirations recently appearing on Paris menus include cold Proven,cale ratatouille (a blend of tomatoes, eggplant, onions and zucchini) topped with a poached egg (served at Taillevent), and a Ni,coise tapenade (a blend of olives, capers, anchovies and olive oil) spread over roasted porgy fillets (at La Cantine des Gourmets).

Boiled Dinner With Turnips And Ham Hocks

Korean Steamed Chicken With Vegetables

Chowchow

Roasted Cauliflower With Tahini-Parsley Sauce
This Middle Eastern sauce goes wonderfully with foods other than roasted cauliflower. It’s traditionally served with falafel and keftes, fish, salads, deep-fried vegetables — or just with pita bread.

Lee Remick's Barbecued Chinese Duck

Stir-Fried Brussels Sprouts With Shallots and Sherry
This recipe came to The Times in 2011 from Grace Young, the chef and cookbook writer. Make sure the Brussels sprouts are dry before they are put into the pan, or the liquid will turn the stir-fry into a braise. This dish can be made ahead of time, all the better for a Thanksgiving feast or a weeknight dinner.

Campari Jelly
Shimmering, brightly colored gelatin is the chosen medium of Sam Bompas and Harry Parr, who have built painstakingly correct models of London’s St. Paul’s Cathedral and Millennium Bridge, and a Madrid airport terminal complete with tiny airplane out of the stuff. The Campari jelly used here was part of the duo’s first job in the United States, a dessert for a dinner in New York in 2009. This jelly was an outer layer, molded over a jelly made with orange juice, and the result was something like a Campari and soda, but in jelly form.

Morning Couscous With Oranges and Dates
This is a delicious way to enjoy couscous. You can reconstitute the couscous the night before and keep it in the refrigerator overnight. All it will need in the morning is a steam in the microwave and the addition of the oranges.

Shanghai Chicken In Wine Sauce

Papaya Sorbet

Spicy Rum Punch
Here is a rum punch to suggest parties near a warm ocean and sand beneath your feet. It’s an old-fashioned concoction, and you’ll need to raid your spice cabinet for this. Pour it over ice and give thanks for the warming comfort of good rum.
