Gluten-Free

3614 recipes found

Saffron Sweet Potato and Red Pepper Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Saffron Sweet Potato and Red Pepper Soup

45m8 servings
Spinach Soup With Coriander, Cinnamon and Allspice
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Spinach Soup With Coriander, Cinnamon and Allspice

This soup was inspired by a Syrian recipe, a spice-laced pan-cooked spinach that is served with yogurt and walnuts on top. This recipe uses the same spices in a puréed spinach soup. It works beautifully. Half of the yogurt is stirred into the soup, contributing a tart flavor that’s a great finishing dimension to the soup. The rest is drizzled onto each serving.

1h4 to 6 servings.
Celery Root and Chestnut Soup With Brussels Sprouts
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Celery Root and Chestnut Soup With Brussels Sprouts

This soup, which came to The Times from executive chef Michael Anthony of New York City’s Gramercy Tavern, has a white, soft and silky base, but each bite has a surprising new texture.

1h 10m8 servings
Cold Tomato-Cilantro Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cold Tomato-Cilantro Soup

This cold soup made with canned tomatoes suggests (but beats out) gazpacho, and has a huge hit of cilantro. Serve it at a summer dinner parties, or simply paired with a grilled cheese. It’s also incredibly refreshing by itself.

45m6 to 8 servings
Melon and Ginger Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Melon and Ginger Soup

Reserve melons that are so ripe, sweet and juicy that they practically fall apart when you cut them for this soup, which is inspired by a recipe by Deborah Madison. Smell the melons when you shop for them at the market; they should make you want to close your eyes and drink in their fragrance. If they’re not really sweet, the soup will be bland. Both cantaloupe and honeydew are great sources of potassium and vitamin A.

1h 10mserves four to six
Puréed White Bean Soup With Pistou
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Puréed White Bean Soup With Pistou

White beans and pesto or pistou (pesto without the pine nuts) always make a nice marriage. Thin the pistou with a little extra olive oil so that you can drizzle it over the rich-tasting purée.

2h 15m6 servings.
Teff Carrot Cake
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Teff Carrot Cake

This deeply spiced carrot cake is studded with toasted walnuts and coconut, and sandwiched with a tangy mix of cream cheese and butter. It's also gluten-free, and festive enough to prepare for a special occasion. The cake comes from the San Francisco pastry chef Elisabeth Prueitt, whose interest in baking with alternative flours has led to many exceptional wheat-free creations. Made with teff flour and sweetened with a mix of coconut sugar and granulated sugar, it results in a tender, moist crumb and irresistible texture.

1h 30m8 to 12 servings
Veracruzana Crab Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Veracruzana Crab Soup

This is an elegant soup that I’ve served at dinner parties as well as family dinners. It has a spicy depth of flavor, resulting from the combination of pickled capers, pickled jalapeños (don’t substitute fresh for canned here) and olives.

1h 15mServes six to eight
Turnip, Leek and Potato Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Turnip, Leek and Potato Soup

A simple French soup that works well regardless of which vegetable gets the emphasis. This is a simple French soup. If you want to vary the proportions of vegetables you can; it works well whether you emphasize the turnips, as I do here, the leeks or the potatoes. Turnips have a slightly bitter edge, and tarragon makes a lovely sweet garnish. Chives would also work.

1h 15m16 to 18 demitasse servings or 8 bowls
Carrot Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Carrot Soup

1hServes 6 to 8
Moroccan Carrot Soup With Mussels
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Moroccan Carrot Soup With Mussels

This is a Moroccan-style carrot soup, which can be served either hot or cold. Subtle sweetness (carrots), acidity (lemon), spice (cumin), fragrance (cilantro) and a touch of salinity (mussels) mirror the very aromas and flavor notes that the best of these German spätlese riesling wines deliver . The soup can also be made without the mussels, but not without the cilantro.

1h6 servings
Roasted Winter Squash With Miso Glaze
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roasted Winter Squash With Miso Glaze

Winter squash, already sweet and caramelized from roasting, makes as delicious a partner for miso glaze as eggplant.

1hServes 4 to 6
Celeriac, Potato, Leek and Apple Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Celeriac, Potato, Leek and Apple Soup

A sweet and savory mixture that works well as a soup. I’ve always loved the combination of celeriac, potatoes and apples, which I first tasted in France as a celeriac, potato and apple purée. The sweet and savory mixture works very nicely as a soup. I like to strain this soup after I purée it to get a velvety texture.

1h 30m16 to 18 demitasse servings or 8 bowls
Leek and Turnip Soup With Kale and Walnut Garnish
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Leek and Turnip Soup With Kale and Walnut Garnish

I recommend that you make a quick stock with the leek greens, onion and turnips trimmings while you chop the vegetables. Just throw them in a pot with a couple of quarts of water, bring to a simmer, cover partially and simmer 20 minutes. Strain through a fine strainer into a bowl. Kale, which comes from the same botanical family as turnips, makes a complementary garnish and the crunchy walnuts contrast beautifully with the smooth, sweet-tasting soup.

1h 30mServes 4
Puréed Tomato and Red Pepper Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Puréed Tomato and Red Pepper Soup

I noticed that the most popular boxed soup at my supermarket is a tomato and red pepper soup, so I decided to come up with my own version.

1h6 servings
Andalusian Chickpea and Spinach Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Andalusian Chickpea and Spinach Soup

A simple peasant soup that is often served with toasted or fried bread doused with vinegar, pine nuts, hard-boiled egg and parsley added at the end, this is a filling and comforting soup that is still suitable for a late spring/early summer meal.

3h6 servings
Fennel, Garlic and Potato Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fennel, Garlic and Potato Soup

This anise-scented soup is reminiscent of the classic potato and leek soup known as vichyssoise, but it’s lighter and contains no dairy. It’s good hot or cold.

1h 10m6 servings
Rice Flour Poundcake
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Rice Flour Poundcake

Rice flour makes this poundcake melt-in-your-mouth tender, and gives it a mild and delicate flavor that’s spiced with a touch of black pepper. It keeps well, so feel free to bake it a day or two ahead of serving, or eat any leftovers for breakfast. This recipe was created by Zachary Golper of Bien Cuit bakery in Brooklyn, who prefers Japanese rice flour for its consistently fine particle size, but any white rice flour will work. (Note: If you don't have an 8-inch loaf pan, you can use a 9-inch pan but the baking time will be about 5 to 10 minutes shorter, and the loaf will be flatter in appearance.)

1h 30m1 (8-inch) loaf
Egg Lemon Soup With Turkey
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Egg Lemon Soup With Turkey

Modeled after a classic Greek egg lemon soup, this is one of many light, comforting soups that make a nice home for leftover turkey. If you haven’t made stock with the turkey carcass, a quick garlic or vegetable stock will do. Make sure that the soup is not at a boil when you add the tempered egg-lemon mixture, or the egg yolks will curdle. The soup should be creamy.

15m6 servings
Henrietta’s Hash Browns
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Henrietta’s Hash Browns

The secret to perfect hash browns, the chef Peter Davis of Henrietta's Table in Cambridge, Massachusetts, told The Times in 2010, is to take a few moments at night to clarify the butter you will use to make the dish in the morning, removing the milk solids that would otherwise burn as you cook. As a corollary, something to do as the butter melts and you strain out the solids, boil off some potatoes, then let them dry in the refrigerator over night. Grate them in the morning, and cook in the clarified butter. When you've got a good crust going, place a plate over the pan, put your hand on it and quickly invert the whole. Then slide the new bottom, until recently the unfinished top, back into the pan to continue cooking. Serve with eggs, naturally.

1h 30m6 servings
Beef Tenderloin Niçoise
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Beef Tenderloin Niçoise

It is human nature to want to spend money on food for an important occasion. It is not necessary, but we still do it. And every now and again, that feels good. A beautiful fillet or tenderloin of beef is something special: Even those who do not cook know that. The joy is that these cuts are simple to prepare, needing nothing except to be roasted, rested and sliced. The accompanying vegetables are not served in great heaping bowls on the table, but are chopped and added as an abundant garnish to the welcoming platter of meat. I have called this style niçoise because the components – potatoes, tomatoes, olives and beans – take their inspiration from that traditional stalwart, the salade niçoise.

1h 15m6 to 8 servings
Shrimp and Brown Rice Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Shrimp and Brown Rice Soup

This irresistible soup is inspired by a Southeast Asian dish traditionally made with Thai jasmine rice. The recipe is adapted from one in “Hot Sour Salty Sweet,” by Naomi Duguid and Jeffrey Alford.

1hServes six
Red Cabbage and Apple Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Red Cabbage and Apple Soup

This is a sweet and spicy winter soup, inspired by a classic red cabbage and apple braise. The yogurt is important here; it enriches the soup at the end. You could also use fat-free sour cream.

1h 15m6 to 8 servings.
Spinach and Turkey Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Spinach and Turkey Salad

Turkey or chicken transforms this classic spinach salad (minus the bacon) into a light main dish, welcome after Thanksgiving and before the rest of the holiday season feasting begins.

5mServes 4 as a main dish