Dinner
8856 recipes found

Grilled Skirt Steak With Mixed Peppers

Curried Lamb Patties

Snap Peas and Shiitake Mushrooms In Scallion Crepes With Lemon Zest

Baked Bluefish

Pasta With Roasted Cauliflower and Blue Cheese
When creamy Gorgonzola dolce hits a pot full of hot pasta, it melts into a rich and complex sauce without your having to do much more than stir. Here, the pasta and sauce are tossed with roasted cauliflower and caramelized, browned leeks. It’s comfort food, but with a blue-cheese bite.

Shaking Beef
This savory-sweet stir-fry, known as bo luc lac or “dice” in Vietnamese, gets its English name from the constant shaking of the pan performed by the cook while browning the meat. It can be tough work to move the hot wok constantly, and the intense heat can burn the ingredients in a wink. This recipe, adapted from the one served at Slanted Door, Charles Phan’s immensely popular Vietnamese restaurant in San Francisco, has been simplified for the home cook. Once the meat is marinated, it is quick work – 20 minutes from start to finish – but don’t try to expedite matters further by dumping all of the meat into the wok at once. Cook the meat in two batches (a pound at a time) so you get a nice, crisp sear.

English Roast Fillet of Beef With Two Sauces

Pan-Fried Skirt Steaks With Shallot Butter

Cold-Beef-And-Lentil Salad

Filet d'Alose Veronique (Shad Fillet With Grapes)

Rice Bowl With Cabbage and Baked Tofu
I cooked up a pot of Thai purple sticky rice that had been lingering in the pantry, and then decided how I would turn it into a meal. It was too sticky to use for stir-fried rice so I made stir-fried vegetables and oven-baked tofu, and served up rice bowls topped with both. I thought it might be an altogether too purple meal, but it was quickly devoured, and we are all the more anti-oxidant rich because of the anthocyanins in the red and purple foods.

Grandma Tedesco's Mussels And Gravy

Splayed Turkey With Herbs
This unorthodox method for roasting a turkey gives you a delicious, evenly cooked bird — fast. Before roasting, the bird’s legs are splayed so they lie flat on the bottom of the roasting pan, where they are seared. That jump-starts the cooking of the dark meat (which always needs more time than the white meat). Then, after searing, the bird is surrounded by onions and wine before going into the oven; this essentially braises the dark meat while the breast meat roasts. The result is tender dark meat and juicy white meat, all ready in under 2 hours in the oven. An added bonus: You’ll get a pan full of rich oniony drippings that can enrich your gravy, or take its place entirely. To get the deepest flavor, this recipe calls for dry-brining your bird at least a day or two ahead. But you can reduce the brining time to 2 hours if you’re pressed for time. Also, if you're trying this with a bird that weighs more than 13 pounds, you will need an extra-large roast pan, and to roast it for a bit longer.

Red Cabbage, Bacon And Stilton Filling

Beef With Red and Green Peppers Chinese Style

Broiled Peppered Fillet of Beef

Quail and Grapes

Gingered Winter Fruit Ambrosia
The lime, honey and ginger marinade is perfect for this grapefruit, pear and grape salad. The chia seeds not only contribute to the nutritional value of the dish; they also act as a natural thickener for the marinade.

Sausages With Grapes

Curried Chicken and Shrimp With Grapes

Halibut With Spiced Vegetables

Marinated Flank Steak With Asian Slaw

Squid With Tomato and Pickled Mustard Greens

Red Cabbage, Carrot and Broccoli Stem Latkes With Caraway and Sesame
I love finding things to do with broccoli stems. I find that allowing the cabbage mixture to sit for 10 to 15 minutes before forming the latkes allows the cabbage to soften a bit, and the latkes hold together better.