Dinner
8856 recipes found

Spinach Soup With Pasta and Egg

Poached Salmon In Ravigote Sauce

Beef-Kidney Stew

Grilled Shrimp With Wilted Spinach and Peaches
The first principle of Indian spice cookery (and of spices in general) is that spices are best when bought whole and ground fresh, as happens in this recipe. Toasting and then grinding the spices — peppercorns, coriander, mustard seeds and cardamom pods — used for the spice rub helps to even out their flavors so that they blend with the mild flavor of the shrimp. Serve them over fresh ripe peaches and tender spinach wilted by a hot mixture of ginger, vinegar, orange juice and curry powder.

Stir-Fried Bean Sprouts With Sprouted Brown Rice
The sprouts I find most often at the supermarket are mung bean sprouts. But lately I’ve also found pea sprouts, which are more delicate and have a delicious fresh flavor. The stir-fry time is much shorter for pea sprouts, about one to two minutes total.

Roasted Coconut Carrots
Carrots don’t have to be boring or lackluster. Roasting, which captures the carrots’ natural sweetness, is emphasized here with the aromatic sweetness of coconut oil. Cilantro, mint, jalapeño and lime ensure there nothing one-dimensional about this dish at all. Chop the herbs just before serving for the freshest flavor.

Fish Stew With Pesto

Three-Greens Gratin
This is a Provençal style gratin, or tian, dense with greens and bound with rice and egg. You can play around with the mix of greens; switch out beet greens for spinach, or some of the chard for kale (kale will require a minute or two more of blanching). I have kept the seasonings to a minimum as you have plenty to prep, but a Provençal cook would probably add chopped parsley and perhaps savory or rosemary. You won’t be using the chard ribs here, but keep them to use in other dishes.

Eggplant Ragout

Russian Cornish Hens

Family Pizza
“The Batali Brothers Cookbook,” published in 2013, includes recipes from Benno and Leo Batali, whose father, Mario, also contributed to the book, editing some of his classic dishes into simpler, weeknight-dinner versions. The Batali family pizza recipe is highly practical: small rounds cooked on a stove, no pizza oven or grill required. Yes, there are a number of steps to making the dough, but the plain parbaked crusts last for days, and need only be topped and broiled when it’s time to eat.

Chicken Thighs In Tomato Sauce

Goi Bo (Spicy Beef Salad)

Chicken Breasts Stuffed With Wild Mushrooms

Turkish-Style Braised Eggplant

Beet Greens Bruschetta With Poached Egg and Fontina
You’d think I’d get tired of greens. But this week while I was buying a nice bunch of beets at the market and another customer asked the vendor to cut off the greens from her beets, I jumped at the chance to get two bunches of free greens. I brought them home, stemmed and cleaned them thoroughly, then blanched them for a minute in salted boiling water. I enjoyed them all week. I made this bruschetta for dinner one night when I was home alone.

Turkey and Red Pepper Hash
This sweet and spicy turkey and red pepper hash is much like a beef picadillo that might be used to fill an empanada or to stuff a chili pepper. I make quick soft tacos most often with warm corn tortillas.

Chicken Livers With Raw-Scallion Sauce

Skillet Duck

Turkey Roulade en Cocotte

Grilled Butterflied Leg Of Lamb With Pesto

Chicken With 40 Cloves of Garlic And Garlic Bread

Herbed Goat Cheese Tartines

Sautéed Potatoes With Black Kale and Nigella
One of the reasons we love latkes so much is because the browned crispy edges of potatoes are so delicious. Even when they are just browned and not particularly crispy, as they are here, they are irresistible. It helps to use a heavy nonstick pan for these so that you can cook the potatoes long enough and on high enough heat to get the browned edges, without losing those edges to the surface of the pan, where they will undoubtedly stick once they have absorbed the oil. I have been using a potato called simply “yellow potatoes” for this; they are slightly starchy, just a little less so than a Yukon gold or a fingerling, both of which will work just as well. Blanch the kale before you cook the potatoes, cut it into slivers, and add to the potatoes once they are tender. I season the mix with nigella seeds, one of my favorite spices; you can also add something with a kick, like cayenne or chile powder, if you want to pump up the heat.