Dinner
8856 recipes found

Dry Rye Manhattan

Polenta With Parmesan and Tomato Sauce
This is my favorite way to serve polenta, and it’s the simplest, too. My son loves it -- maybe your kids will feel the same.

Chard Stalk, Chickpea, Tahini and Yogurt Dip
When you’ve bought a bunch of Swiss chard and used the leaves for another dish, like an oven-baked frittata with yogurt, Swiss chard and green garlic, save the stems. Then you can make this dip, which is a cross between hummus and classic Middle Eastern dip called silqbiltahina, made with chard stalks and tahini. I’ve added lots of yogurt to the mix. I love to use some red chard stalks because they give the dip a beautiful pale pink hue. This will keep for 3 or 4 days in the refrigerator. It will become more pungent as it sits.

Fennel, Kale and Rice Gratin
Two types of greens provide delicious contrast in this comforting yet light dish, which is perfect for a weeknight dinner or a festive side. It's a flexible recipe, lending itself to all sorts of adaptations. Make it once, and then make it your own.

Curried Carrot and Coconut Soup
There’s a nice challenge in staring into a less than sufficiently stocked refrigerator. Last night we were down to not much more than carrots. Thus: them, an onion, grated ginger, a sort of curry mix. There was stock in the freezer, a can of coconut milk. A lime. Wish I’d had cilantro, but hey, it worked.

Provençal Zucchini and Swiss Chard Tart
This is such a pretty mixture of zucchini and greens that I hate to hide it under a top crust. Sometimes I substitute beet greens for the Swiss chard.

Baked Frittata With Yogurt, Chard and Green Garlic
Inspired by the signature Provençal chard omelet called truccha, this beautiful baked frittata incorporates thick Greek yogurt and lots of green garlic. It will puff up in the oven, but then it settles back down. Use a generous bunch of chard for this – green, red or rainbow – and save the stalks to use in the chard stalk and chickpea purée that I’m also posting this week. I like to serve the frittata at room temperature, or I grab a cold slice for lunch. It’s a wonderfully portable dish. The filling can be prepared through Step 4 up to 3 days ahead. The frittata keeps well for 2 or 3 days in the refrigerator.

Tomato and Carrot Marinara Sauce
If you’re trying to eat less meat but miss chunky tomato sauce, you’ll appreciate the finely diced carrots in this one.

Baked Beans With Mint, Peppers and Tomatoes
I’m becoming hooked on baked beans. The long, slow, gentle cooking called for in this recipe results in a thick, sweet sauce and very soft beans.

Sautéed Beets With Pasta, Sage and Brown Butter
Give a cook a beet, and he’ll probably do one of two things with it: Reject it for fear of turning the kitchen into a juicy red crime scene, or roast it and serve it with goat cheese. I can take this marriage or leave it, but even if you love it, you must admit that it only scratches the surface of what beets have to offer. More than half the time that I prepare beets, I begin by shredding them in a food processor. After that, you can serve them raw with a simple dressing, or you can stir-fry them in a skillet to brown them slightly, which brings out their sweetness like nothing else. This recipe employs the latter technique (with the addition of sage) then calls for tossing the beets with pasta. A finishing of grated Parmesan is a salty counterpoint to the caramelized sweetness of the beets.

Red Chard, Potato and White Bean Ragout
This comforting stew is infused with pink from the red chard. It makes a hearty meal, served with a salad and crusty bread.

Butter-Braised Cardoons With Mushrooms and Bread Crumbs
Cardoons are related to artichokes but look like celery — or celery gone wild, anyway. They take a little time and trouble to find (try a specialty grocery store or an Italian market) and to trim and string, but they are worth the effort.

Quinoa and Beet Pilaf
Use regular pearl white quinoa for this beautiful pink pilaf, which uses both roasted beets and their greens.

Last-Minute Sort-of Spanish Shrimp

Swiss Chard
How to cook Swiss chard.

Coconut-Braised Beef

Pasta With Zucchini and Mint
This minty Roman-style zucchini is wonderful with pasta or served on its own.

Black-Eyed Peas With Vegetables and Small Pasta
The range of bean and vegetable main dishes in the Greek repertory is striking; every region has its specialties. Many of the traditional dishes are called “olive oil dishes” (or ladera), because they are cooked with copious amounts of extra virgin olive oil. I tone down the amounts in my kitchen. But I still use enough to ensure that the broth accompanying vegetables or beans is alchemized to a velvety sauce, often enhanced with a splash of fresh lemon juice or vinegar just before serving. Since black-eyed peas require no soaking, you can cook this after work so long as you have some vegetables around the house. It is an utterly simple dish that I’ve adapted from a recipe in Ms. Kochilas’s cookbook.

Tomato and Goat Cheese Tart
The tomato tarts and quiches I’ve been eating in Provence are delightful. Spreading mustard on the crust before you top it with tomatoes is a new idea that makes perfect sense to me, as mustard is such a perfect condiment for tomatoes.

Beef, Potato, Zucchini And Tomato Stew

Spinach With Mushrooms and Bread
This simple vegetarian recipe, from Mark Bittman, is a great light lunch, the result of a trip to a Parisian market in 2008. Pairing bread from an earlier dinner with flavorful chanterelles and spinach, he came up with this quick, flexible meal. It was, as he wrote, “a completely honest and delicious dish that might’ve been the most creative thing I did all week, had it not been among the most traditional.”

Bone Broth
"Bone broth" has become stylish as part of the Paleo diet, which enthusiastically recommends eating meat and bones. (The idea is to eat like our Paleolithic, pre-agricultural ancestors.) But cooks have known its wonderful qualities for centuries. This robust and savory beef broth — more than a stock, less than a soup — can be the basis for innumerable soups and stews, but it also makes a satisfying and nourishing snack on its own.

Beets and Goat Cheese on a Bed of Spinach
I was inspired by Wolfgang Puck’s iconic goat cheese and beet napoleon to make something similar, but decided on a dish that is much less elaborate. If you have time to spare, you could stack the beet slices and goat cheese rather than crumbling the goat cheese over the beets.
