Dinner

8856 recipes found

Chinese Steak With Asparagus and Rice
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Chinese Steak With Asparagus and Rice

45m2 servings
Simple Trahana Soup With Lemon and Olive Oil
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Simple Trahana Soup With Lemon and Olive Oil

This is just about the simplest dish to make with trahana, yet I find it incredibly satisfying and refreshing. I like it both hot and cold; it is cooling on a hot summer day and comforting on a cool one (we were in the middle of a bad heat wave when I was testing this week’s recipes). The soup is adapted from a recipe in Diane Kochilas’s new cookbook: “Ikaria: Lessons on Food, Life, and Longevity From the Greek Island Where People Forget to Die.” My favorite herb to use with the soup is fresh dill. If you want to add more ingredients, simmer vegetables of your choice in the broth, or add blanched or steamed vegetables to the soup when you serve it. Broccoli would be great, as would peas, beans, or sugar snap peas.

25mServes 6
Stir-Fried Quinoa With Vegetables and Tofu
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Stir-Fried Quinoa With Vegetables and Tofu

I’ve substituted cooked quinoa here for rice. You can use either regular or royal red quinoa for this dish. As with all stir-fries, once all the ingredients for this one are prepped, the cooking takes less than five minutes.

15mServes four
Mung Beans and Rice (Mashkitchiri)
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Mung Beans and Rice (Mashkitchiri)

1h 10m3 servings as a main dish
Seared Sea Scallops With Ginger-Lime Butter
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Seared Sea Scallops With Ginger-Lime Butter

Day-boat scallops, the kind that are dry-packed (never frozen or dosed with preservatives), are what you want for this decadent but very simple dish. The scallops are seared on cast iron, but gradually, for a crisp, well-browned surface that intensifies their natural sweetness. Ginger, lime and hot pepper enhance the rich meatiness of all fresh seafood, and here especially so. A roasted sweet potato and a pile of blanched bok choy complete this quintessentially elegant, fast-food meal.

1h2 servings
Chicken Curry Potpie
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Chicken Curry Potpie

1h 30m5 servings
Stuffed Capon Breast With Corn And Pea Risotto
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Stuffed Capon Breast With Corn And Pea Risotto

1h 30mFour servings
Mushroom and Dried Porcini Soup
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Mushroom and Dried Porcini Soup

This has such an intense flavor for such a simple soup. With virtually no fat in the soup, it has a tonic quality, and not only makes a great starter or light supper, but a delicious and effective between meal pick-me-up.

1h 45mServes 4
Khao Soi Gai (Northern Thai Coconut-Curry Noodles With Chicken)
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Khao Soi Gai (Northern Thai Coconut-Curry Noodles With Chicken)

You’ll find khao soi, a deeply fragrant, coconut milk-based stew, throughout Southeast Asia, but the dish is a specialty of Chiang Mai, a city in Northern Thailand. Chicken is simmered in a creamy, spicy-sweet broth, then served over boiled egg noodles and garnished with crunchy fried noodles. (When made with beef, the dish is called khao soi nuea.) This version is adapted from Noree Thai, a restaurant in Los Angeles, which Noree Pla owns with her partner, the chef Fern Kaewtathip. Ms. Pla serves the khao soi she learned from her mother, which requires more than a dozen ingredients, but once you have the ingredients prepared, the dish comes together in less than an hour. For a lighter broth, use about half of the curry paste; for a more pungent khao soi, use it all.

4h4 servings
Corn Empanadas
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Corn Empanadas

Back in 2013, David Tanis learned to make several versions of empanadas from his friend Fernando Trocca, an Argentine chef, including one filled with sweet corn. Here, Mr. Tanis uses potatoes, peppers and ham, in addition to corn, to fill the handmade dough. It’s not a quick project, but it yields dividends and the satisfaction of pulling dozens of the small pies out of the oven.

1h 30m36 empanadas
Roasted Cauliflower Gratin With Tomatoes and Goat Cheese
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Roasted Cauliflower Gratin With Tomatoes and Goat Cheese

Roasting is one of my favorite ways to prepare cauliflower, and I have always loved preparations that pair the vegetable with coriander seeds. I use coriander seeds and cinnamon to season the tomato sauce that I toss with the roasted cauliflower and sautéed red onions, then add a couple of eggs beaten with goat cheese.

1h 20mServes 4 to 6
Vegetarian Mushroom Meatballs With Honey-Ginger Glaze
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Vegetarian Mushroom Meatballs With Honey-Ginger Glaze

These tender, aromatic meatballs are packed with almost a pound of vegetables and a healthy dose of fresh ginger. Rice noodles are the secret to these tender meatballs, keeping them moist while they bake. The shiitake mushrooms provide rich, meaty umami flavor, while the baby bok choy keeps the meatballs delicate and light. These meatballs make a great snack for entertaining, or can form the foundation of dinner when served over brown rice with more steamed bok choy on the side. Leftover meatballs can be frozen and reheated in a 425-degree oven until warmed through, about 15 minutes.

45m2 dozen meatballs
Refried Bean, Zucchini and Corn Gratin
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Refried Bean, Zucchini and Corn Gratin

This is my own interpretation of a traditional Southwestern dish (that has many interpretations) called Three Sisters Casserole. Three Sisters refers to the Native American practice of growing corn, beans and squash in the same field. I’ve seen many different recipes for Three Sisters Casserole and Three Sisters Gratin, some using winter squash, more using summer squash. Sometimes the vegetables are combined and topped with a layer of polenta. In this version, each element gets its own flavorful layer. Although you can use canned beans for the dish, I urge you to use simmered beans because the refried beans will taste best if you reduce them in their flavorful broth.

1h 15m6 to 8 servings
Collard Greens Stuffed With Quinoa and Turkey
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Collard Greens Stuffed With Quinoa and Turkey

It takes some time, but I love filling collard greens. Bigger than grape leaves (so you don’t have to make as many), the large flat leaves are great stuffers. I used a combination of quinoa and leftover turkey for this slightly sweet Middle Eastern filling spiced with cinnamon and allspice; rice would work just as well.

1h 30mAbout 1 dozen stuffed leaves
Two-Pasta Timbale
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Two-Pasta Timbale

30m6 servings
Tim McNulty's Skate Wings Piccata
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Tim McNulty's Skate Wings Piccata

30m6 servings
Swedish Meatballs
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Swedish Meatballs

These mildly spiced meatballs are the essence of winter comfort food, just the kind of thing you’ll want to come in from a blustery day to enjoy. Serve them with mashed potatoes and lingonberry jam, if you want something sweet.

45m4 dozen meatballs
Curried Shepherd’s Pie
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Curried Shepherd’s Pie

This spiced version of the traditional English dish was developed in 1984 by Pierre Franey and Craig Claiborne for an article about budget-friendly meals. Here, the ground beef base is laced with curry powder, cumin and coriander then topped with a pile of fluffy, mashed potatoes dotted with green peas.

1h 15m6 to 8 servings
Khatti Dal, Hyderabad-Style
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Khatti Dal, Hyderabad-Style

Julie Sahni is an architect by training, but while teaching Indian cooking on the side, she was “discovered” in 1974 and written about in The Times by Florence Fabricant. She has since become a well-known author of Indian cookbooks. In 2012, she taught Mark Bittman how to make several different kinds of dal, including this one. Carefully follow instructions for the tadka — heated ghee or oil and spices. It is the finishing touch, unparalleled in its brilliance and simplicity, and pairing the correct tadka with its designated dal is if not critical then at least desirable. To make it, you take ghee or oil and heat it with seeds, spices and, usually, some kind of onions, often to a degree that other cuisines might consider “overcooked.” The tadka is poured into the dal just before serving, and the whole thing explodes with fragrance and flavor.

30mAbout 4 servings
Breaded Fillets of Sole
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Breaded Fillets of Sole

30m4 servings
Homemade Sour Bulgur Trahana From Ikaria
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Homemade Sour Bulgur Trahana From Ikaria

Trahana is a wheat product that is eaten throughout Greece and the Eastern Mediterranean. There are many versions, some made with milk, usually from goats or sheep that is called sweet trahana, some with a combination of milk and yogurt, called sour trahana, and even a lenten version made with vegetable pulp. The liquid is combined with wheat – bulgur, semolina, or a mix of semolina and flour – and made into a dry dough (if using flour) or simmered until it is a thick porridge. Then it is spread out on netting and dried in the sun. Once thoroughly dry it is broken up into granules that can range in size from bulgurlike morsels to small pellets. You can find imported Greek trahana in Greek markets. I found five different types in my local Greek market in Los Angeles and each one behaves a little bit differently when you cook it. It is easy to make yourself, as I found when I made this recipe from Diane Kochilas’s wonderful new cookbook “Ikaria: Lessons on Food, Life, and Longevity From the Greek Island Where People Forget to Die.” This is the trahana that I used for all of this week’s Recipes for Health. I am happy to have this new staple on hand in my pantry.

3h 30m1 1/4 pounds trahana, about 18 servings
Blanquette De Veau
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Blanquette De Veau

A bourgeois veal stew in cream sauce from Burgundy. This straightforward blanquette recipe comes from the ''Balthazar Cookbook."

2h 30m6 servings
Stir-Fried Rice Stick Noodles With Bok Choy and Cherry Tomatoes
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Stir-Fried Rice Stick Noodles With Bok Choy and Cherry Tomatoes

Rice noodles are delicate and light, and especially welcome to those who are gluten-intolerant. You might find it easier to use tongs for this once you’ve added the noodles to the pan. Bok choy is a member of the cabbage family and has all those antioxidant-rich phytonutrients that the brassicas are known for.

35mServes four to six
Grilled Pepper Omelet
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Grilled Pepper Omelet

Roasted peppers, chopped herbs and a little bit of Parmesan make for a quick omelet in the spirit of a pipérade. I often make the classic Basque pipérade, eggs scrambled with stewed peppers and tomatoes. This time, I kept it a little simpler and used my roasted peppers to fill an omelet. I added chopped, fresh herbs and a little bit of Parmesan to the mix. If your peppers are already roasted (I had plenty on hand as I’d been working with roasted peppers all week) this is a 2- to 5-minute dinner. As always, the better the eggs (farm-fresh, pastured), the better the omelet.

5m1 serving