Dinner

8856 recipes found

Stuffed Acorn Squash With Mushroom Gravy
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Stuffed Acorn Squash With Mushroom Gravy

This stuffed squash is a favorite of the family of Amy Lawrence, and her husband, Justin Fox Burks, who developed it for their blog, the Chubby Vegetarian. The couple brings this dish to Thanksgiving dinner, but we think it would make a great vegetarian centerpiece anytime, from fall to spring.

1h2 to 3 servings
Shrimp and Grits With Roasted Tomato, Fennel and Sausage
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Shrimp and Grits With Roasted Tomato, Fennel and Sausage

1h 30m4 servings
Roasted Pork With Carrot Glaze, Polenta And Green Beans
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Roasted Pork With Carrot Glaze, Polenta And Green Beans

1h 15m4 servings
Quail With Grits, Apple and Celery Root
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Quail With Grits, Apple and Celery Root

3hFour servings
Sameh Wadi’s Wheat Berries With Carrots, Harissa Yogurt and Dates
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Sameh Wadi’s Wheat Berries With Carrots, Harissa Yogurt and Dates

The Arab-American chef Sameh Wadi built this very modern dish from some very traditional components of Middle Eastern cooking: yogurt, harissa, carrots and whole grains of wheat. It works equally well as a centerpiece for a vegetarian meal, or alongside a lamb tagine or stew such as Lamb Shanks with Pomegranate and Saffron. To produce the grain called freekeh, wheat berries are harvested green, cracked and roasted over open fires to produce a smoky, earthy-tasting result. “You can smell it in the market when the freekeh is in season,” Mr. Wadi said.

1h4 to 6 servings
Braised Stuffed Artichoke A la Barigoule
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Braised Stuffed Artichoke A la Barigoule

2h4 servings
Grandma Salazar's Tortillas
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Grandma Salazar's Tortillas

This recipe for flour tortillas came to The Times in 2005 from Traci Des Jardins, a San Francisco chef whose heritage is Cajun on one side and Mexican on the other, via her maternal grandmother, Angela Salazar. You’ll see “bacon drippings” in the ingredients. These make for really delicious tortillas.

1h 25m12 8-inch tortillas
Polenta With Vegetables And Tomato Sauce
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Polenta With Vegetables And Tomato Sauce

45m6 servings
Leek Bread Pudding
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Leek Bread Pudding

2h 30m12 servings as a side dish
Mediterranean Artichoke and Fresh Fava Stew
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Mediterranean Artichoke and Fresh Fava Stew

Favas, artichokes, spring onions and green garlic are all fleetingly in season at the same time. Here’s a way to use them all together. This dish is based on a Greek olive oil recipe, meaning that the vegetables are traditionally stewed in two or three times as much oil as I use here. I substitute water for some of the oil.

45mServes six
Artichoke, Lobster And Sausage Gratin
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Artichoke, Lobster And Sausage Gratin

45mFour servings
Caviar and Lobster in Brioche Cups
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Caviar and Lobster in Brioche Cups

40m24 cups
Twice-Cooked Duck With Pea Shoots
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Twice-Cooked Duck With Pea Shoots

The duck meat is meant to be simmered well ahead of the final cooking, so this recipe can be prepared several days ahead. (In the process, a bonus broth is achieved, some of which is used to make the sauce. Leftover broth can be saved for a little noodle soup.) Then, at the last minute, the chopped, cooked meat is briefly stir-fried; showered with aromatics like ginger, orange zest, garlic, cumin and hot pepper; splashed with rice wine; and finished with just-wilted pea shoots.

1h 20m4 to 6 servings
Polenta With Corn And Cheese
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Polenta With Corn And Cheese

10m3 servings
Baked Polenta With Crispy Leeks and Blue Cheese
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Baked Polenta With Crispy Leeks and Blue Cheese

Baking polenta in the oven means you don’t have to stand over the pot, stirring the extremely hot, bubbling mass. Here, the polenta is cooked in stock for the deepest flavor. Then it’s topped with piquant crumbles of Gorgonzola dolce and crisp fried leeks, which add sweetness and crunch. You can serve this as a warming main course along with a crisp green salad, or as a rich and flavorful side dish to simple roasted meats or fish.

1h4 to 6 servings
Crook’s Corner Shrimp and Grits
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Crook’s Corner Shrimp and Grits

“Everything I do is as authentic as possible, but with my own refinements,” the chef Bill Neal told Craig Claiborne in a 1985 profile. Mr. Neal brought his historical approach to Southern cooking to Crook’s Corner, the restaurant he opened in a former taxicab stand in Chapel Hill, N.C. This savory blend of shrimp with cheese grits became one of the restaurant’s best-known dishes.

1h4 servings
Polenta With Fennel, Peppers, Tomatoes And Cheese
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Polenta With Fennel, Peppers, Tomatoes And Cheese

30m2 servings
Chicken Liver Tacos With Rhubarb Salsa
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Chicken Liver Tacos With Rhubarb Salsa

Tart rhubarb meets earthy chicken livers in this unlikely savory pairing. The chicken livers cook quickly, in minutes, in fact. Keep an eye on them to make sure the insides stay pink, then tuck them into warm corn tortillas. Serve with a fresh red like a Lagrein to round out a sophisticated, bold meal you can make on a hot day or a weeknight when you’re looking to impress guests.

1h4 servings
Baked Stuffed Artichokes
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Baked Stuffed Artichokes

1h 10m4 main dish servings or 6 to 8 first-course servings
Braised Fresh Black-Eyed Peas With Baby Turnips
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Braised Fresh Black-Eyed Peas With Baby Turnips

Fresh black-eyed peas, still in their pods, are a pretty pale green, with a gorgeous purple-black O-ring on each tiny pea. They’re tender and creamy and snappy — with an earthy flavor that goes well with the mint, pepper and turnips in this shallow braise — and they cook in just minutes unlike their wintered-over chalky, drab dried counterparts. I love them when they come in fresh at the market, and also love the so-called chore of shucking them. The chance to sit for a minute and watch the world go by while shelling a big pile of fresh peas will always leave you feeling glad you did.

9h4 servings
Game Day Nachos
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Game Day Nachos

Here is a heavily-loaded platter of shredded pork inflected with the flavors of cumin, coriander and lime, layered with tortilla chips and sliced radishes, flecks of scallion and leaves of cilantro, drifts of shredded cheddar and lime-scented sour cream, to be accompanied by hot sauce, napkins and beer. It is football-watching food, but doubles nicely as dinner for teens, young adults, anyone interested in the inhaling of the delicious. The pork is an all-day affair, requiring five to seven hours of roasting in a low oven so that the meat achieves a collapsing sweetness beneath a burnished crust. But the rest of the recipe is easy work indeed: bowls of the condiments may be combined on a platter with the shredded meat and diced skin in any manner you deem appetizing.

5h10 to 12 servings or more
Polenta With Hot Tomato-Eggplant Sauce
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Polenta With Hot Tomato-Eggplant Sauce

40m2 servings
Turkey Thighs With Prosciutto, Tomatoes and Olives
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Turkey Thighs With Prosciutto, Tomatoes and Olives

For all the talk about how boring turkey is, it can be quite rewarding when handled properly. But roasting a whole bird is among the least forgiving methods: The white meat almost inevitably overcooks and becomes dry, while the dark meat is undercooked and remains tough. In pursuit of perfectly moist meat and crisp skin, this recipe focuses on turkey thighs. All the measurements and timing are approximate. The general method is to cook the dark meat for a long time, with moisture, and it becomes so tender it gains the consistency of pulled pork. Brown all the meat really well on the skin side, then cook the thighs along with aromatic vegetables, olives, tomatoes, some pork and a bit of liquid. Expose the browned skin so it remains crisp. It may not be exactly traditional, but it makes sense.

2h 30m4 or more servings
Grilled Lamb on Rosemary Skewers
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Grilled Lamb on Rosemary Skewers

Lamb on rosemary skewers has to be one of the oldest recipes in the world. In ancient times, the meat could just as easily have been goat, or something wilder, and fish was no doubt also a candidate. The idea of cutting branches of rosemary and using them as skewers must certainly have occurred to humans soon after they figured out how to build fires. You want rosemary branches with woody stalks, if possible. But if the stalks are too flimsy to poke through the lamb, run a pilot hole through with a skewer, and be sure to grill the lamb and figs separately because they'll cook at different rates. You might throw together a little basting sauce of lemon, garlic and a little more rosemary, but the skewers are just fine without it, and have been for thousands of years.

20m4 to 6 servings