Fruits
1057 recipes found

Pineapple Coconut Tarte Tatin

Banana Filling

Apple Tarte Tatin

Arugula, Apple And Roquefort Salad

Sauteed Foie Gras With Apple-Wine Sauce And Potato-Onion Latke

Sally Darr's Golden-Delicious-Apple Tart

Sugar-Glazed Duck and Exotic Fruit

Duck Breast And Mango Salad

Soft-Shell Crabs With Corn And Black-Bean Salsa

Apples With Candied Bacon à la Mode

Apple-Hazelnut Bread

Banana Pudding With Pistachio Crumble
This banana pudding is not the usual vanilla-wafer-topped affair, and it doesn’t come from the South. It came to The Times in 2013 from Fedora, a restaurant in Manhattan, and it is divine: a rich, creamy custard fragrant with puréed ripe banana, topped with lightly salted, crisp crumbles of pistachio butter cookie. It is also irresistible — sweet, creamy, salty, crunchy — and all too easy to lap up. The pudding and crumble can be made entirely in advance (up to three days), though don’t sprinkle the crumbs over the top until you're ready to serve. You want to maintain the crunch for as long as possible, and once the cookie meets the pudding, the countdown begins.

Craig Claiborne’s Ambrosia
This mixture of oranges, bananas, grated coconut and sugar is a dessert that is considered by many to be as Southern as magnolias and mint juleps. Craig Claiborne brought this recipe to The Times in 1987 after spending Thanksgiving at the Elgin mansion house, a Greek Revival-style home, in Natchez, Miss., built between 1840 and 1855, and owned by Dr. William Calhoun and his wife, Ruth Ellen. Ethel Banta, Ms. Calhoun's sister, contributed this recipe. Need a few tips on how to segment citrus? Here's a video.

Mango-Rose Water Lassi

Apple-Pecan Tart

Apple Walnut Galette
A great rustic apple pie for Thanksgiving, this has very little butter in the pastry and a minimum of sweetening. It’s all about the apples.

Forbidden Rice Pudding With Blueberries
This recipe is an adaptation of a wonderful recipe by Sherry Yard, executive pastry chef at Spago Beverly Hills. Forbidden rice, also known as Chinese black rice, is packaged by Lotus Foods and sold at Whole Foods and many gourmet grocers. It becomes purple when cooked, which makes a rice pudding made with Forbidden rice ideal for the addition of blueberries. Serve this for dessert or for breakfast. For a delicious vegan rice pudding, substitute rice beverage for the milk.

Roasted Apple and Pear Compote With Candied Ginger
This comforting compote should be served warm. If you do want a little indulgence, add a dollop of crème fraîche to each serving.

Ambrosia
This is a classic Southern dessert in which layers of oranges, bananas and coconut are drizzled with honey, lemon juice and Cointreau. The perfect sweet to serve in the dreary midwinter months when your palate is craving something bright and juicy, but the berries haven't arrived yet.

Pistachio-Crusted Chicken Breast

Shrimp and Rice Salad With Pineapple Vinaigrette

Quince Compote
Quince is a fruit that grows abundantly throughout the Mediterranean. Though it’s too hard and tart to bite into, it has a wonderful perfume. I like to combine it with apples in this simple compote.

Tiger Shrimp With Pineapple and Smoked Bacon

New Crop Applesauce
New-crop apples (that is, ones just picked) don’t necessarily make it to supermarkets, where the general rule is to stock four or five dependable varieties that travel well. Those may come from eastern Washington or New Zealand or Peru. Not that there is anything intrinsically wrong with supermarket apples. They still have more or less the same health benefits and versatility in the kitchen. They just aren’t going to make your heart beat faster. If you long for the thrill of new-crop apples, head to a farmers’ market, a farm stand or an honest-to-goodness apple tree on a cool day. What you will find is firm, dense fruit, some with the leaves still attached. When you take your first bite into the crisp flesh, the sweet juices fairly drip upon the tongue, not at all like the apples you recall. Smack your lips and swoon.