Dinner

8856 recipes found

Poached Poulet With Brown Rice
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Poached Poulet With Brown Rice

2h6 servings
Chicken Ragout Meme
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Chicken Ragout Meme

1h6 servings
Grilled Rib-Eye With Wasabi-Garlic Paste
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Grilled Rib-Eye With Wasabi-Garlic Paste

20m4 servings
Carrot-and-Roasted-Red-Pepper Puree
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Carrot-and-Roasted-Red-Pepper Puree

20m4 servings
Ribollita With Cabbage
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Ribollita With Cabbage

In Tuscany region of Italy, the way to transform leftover bean and vegetable soup into the ultimate comfort food is to reheat the soup with dry or toasted bread, then blend it into a thick, comforting pap. This is called ribollita, which means “reboiled.”

2h 45mServes four to six
Sweet and Sour Peppers Stuffed With Rice or Bulgur and Fennel
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Sweet and Sour Peppers Stuffed With Rice or Bulgur and Fennel

These sweet and sour peppers are great on their own, but they can also be filled. I like the filled peppers both cold, as sort of a salad, and warm. This is one instance in which fleshy red peppers work best.

1hServes 6
Shoulder Steak With Herbs
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Shoulder Steak With Herbs

10m6 servings
Crunchy Calamari Salad
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Crunchy Calamari Salad

30m6 to 8 servings
Pasta With Roasted Red Peppers and Goat Cheese
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Pasta With Roasted Red Peppers and Goat Cheese

Years ago, I stayed with an Italian friend in Bologna who worked long hours at his job. By the time he got home, he was hungry, so he’d start water boiling and cast about his tiny kitchen to see what he could use for dinner. Then, to my fascination, he’d whip up a delicious pasta sauce from almost nothing: a few anchovies and some walnuts, or a can of tuna and another of beans. Yesterday’s bread became today’s bread crumbs, browned in olive oil with garlic and tossed with spaghetti, olives, capers and jarred tomato purée. I try to keep a jar of roasted peppers handy at all times. They’re useful for panini, pizzas and especially pastas like this one. Spanish piquillo peppers are particularly sweet, but bell peppers will do as well. If you have basil, it’s delicious in this dish — but not required.

10mServes four
Whole Grain Macaroni and Cheese
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Whole Grain Macaroni and Cheese

This is a macaroni and cheese that's not too heavy and benefits mightily from the use of whole-wheat pasta and the addition of broccoli. You can assemble it ahead and bake it when you need it, or bake it ahead and reheat. There are a number of excellent whole wheat macaroni products on the market now. Check out Community Grains and MagNoodles. When you cook the macaroni, be sure to cook it for less time than usual so that it is more al dente; otherwise it will become too soft and may fall apart when you bake it in the final casserole.

1h6 servings
Tuscan Sandwiches
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Tuscan Sandwiches

40m8 servings
Roasted Red Pepper Puree
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Roasted Red Pepper Puree

20mAbout 3/4 cup
Southeast Asian Chicken, Two Ways
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Southeast Asian Chicken, Two Ways

30m4 servings
Sautéed Spicy Carrots With Black Quinoa
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Sautéed Spicy Carrots With Black Quinoa

This is inspired by a classic Moroccan spiced cooked carrot salad (Ommok Houriya is one variation of the transliteration). Carrots and cumin have long been a favorite combination of mine; added to this mix is fresh green chile and crushed coriander. I finish this off with a sprinkling of black quinoa and fresh mint (cilantro would also be good). If on the off-chance you can find a selection of multicolored carrots – yellow, purple, and orange – the dish will be all the more beautiful, but it is pretty enough with regular orange carrots. Cook them long enough to bring out the sweetness, which means longer than crisp-tender. They should be soft, but not mushy.

15mServes 6 to 8
Dosas With Mustard Greens and Pumpkin-Seed Chutney
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Dosas With Mustard Greens and Pumpkin-Seed Chutney

Making dosas — those gloriously thin, pleasingly sour South Indian flatbreads — at home requires some advance planning. You may need to hunt down the ingredients (online or at an Indian market), and you’ll definitely have to soak the lentils and then let the batter ferment for at least 8 hours or overnight. But the crisp and flavorful crepes are well worth the effort. Note that the first dosas you fry might not turn out well — spreading the batter thin enough takes practice. This recipe, adapted from the chef Anita Jaisinghani of Pondicheri, calls for filtered water because fluoride can interfere with fermentation.

1h 30m6 servings
Garlic Broth With Lobster or Chicken
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Garlic Broth With Lobster or Chicken

2h 25mFour servings
Roasted Peking Chicken
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Roasted Peking Chicken

1h 30m6 servings
Stir-Fried Shrimp With Spicy Greens
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Stir-Fried Shrimp With Spicy Greens

Whenever I use a red-tinged vegetable like amaranth in a dish I know the vegetable is bringing with it lots of antioxidant-rich anthocyanins, a flavonoid found in dark red and blue pigments. Use beet greens if you can’t find amaranth; they will bring with them the same red pigments, which make for a richly colored sauce. For a beautiful meal, serve the stir-fry with red rice, like Bhutanese rice.

20mServes 4
Hot Cajun-Style Crab Boil
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Hot Cajun-Style Crab Boil

A trip to Avery Island, La., the home of Tabasco sauce, inspired this Jacques Pépin recipe from 1994. A few years earlier, Paul McIlhenny, the fourth generation of his family to produce the hot sauce, served Mr. Pépin and his wife a bountiful crab boil. ” People helped themselves,” Mr. Pépin wrote, adding, “We washed the banquet down with plenty of cold beer.” Here, he substitutes blue crab for crawfish, and kielbasa for the hot Cajun sausage. But whatever you use, keep Mr. Pépin’s recommendation and have a beer alongside.

1h 15m6 servings
Melange of Winter Vegetables
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Melange of Winter Vegetables

15m4 servings
Stir-fried Tofu With Carrots and Red Peppers
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Stir-fried Tofu With Carrots and Red Peppers

Make sure to cut the carrots and red peppers into the same size julienne (julienne are thin strips) so that they cook at the same rate. Both of these vegetables keep well in the refrigerator, so this should be a dish you can pull together easily.

20mServes four
Salt Cod In Tomato Sauce
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Salt Cod In Tomato Sauce

30m4 servings
Winter Squash, Leek and Farro Gratin With Feta and Mint
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Winter Squash, Leek and Farro Gratin With Feta and Mint

A delicious, and simple, winter squash gratin. This tastes like the filling of many Greek winter squash pies I have made, but it is a simpler dish. The squash is roasted, which gives it great depth of flavor. I love the sweetness of the squash against the salty feta, and the chewy farro against the tender squash. Most of the elements for this gratin can be prepared ahead if you want to go about this piecemeal – farro freezes well and keeps for a few days in the refrigerator; roasted squash keeps well in the refrigerator for a few days as well.

1h 20mServes 6
Veal Roast With Mango Sauce
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Veal Roast With Mango Sauce

1h 40m6 servings