Gluten-Free

3618 recipes found

Mâche and Radicchio Salad With Beets and Walnut Vinaigrette
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Mâche and Radicchio Salad With Beets and Walnut Vinaigrette

Of all the greens I worked with this week, mâche has the sweetest, mildest flavor. It goes nicely with the bitter radicchio, sweet beets and the nutty vinaigrette. Mâche is so delicate that it takes very little dressing.

10mServes 6
Smashed Turnips With Fresh Horseradish
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Smashed Turnips With Fresh Horseradish

Don’t pass turnips by the next time you’re at the market. When cooked right, their earthy flavor is seriously irresistible. At The Meatball Shop, people go crazy for them. The kick from the horseradish brings out the natural sweetness, and the sour cream adds a tangy, rich element.

45m4 to 6 servings
Lemon and Garlic Chicken With Spiced Spinach
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lemon and Garlic Chicken With Spiced Spinach

This is a heavenly combination; I’m not sure what I like best, the subtly spiced spinach or the chicken. They make a great combo. When you add the rinsed spinach to the pan after cooking the chicken it will wilt in the liquid left on the leaves after washing, and it will deglaze the pan at the same time.

30mServes 4
Mango-Rose Water Lassi
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Mango-Rose Water Lassi

4 servings
Polenta With Parmesan and Tomato Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

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.

1h 15mServes four
Albacore Roasted in a Bed of Lettuce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Albacore Roasted in a Bed of Lettuce

This is inspired by a traditional Provençal tuna dish. Albacore works just as well. It has a lot going for it as a New Year’s dish, what with all the green leaves and the fish – lots of prosperity. Saffron is optional. I like to serve the lettuce, cut into strips, on the side.

1h4 servings.
Chard Stalk, Chickpea, Tahini and Yogurt Dip
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

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.

35mMakes about 3 cups, serving 10 to 12
Fennel, Kale and Rice Gratin
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

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.

1h 20mServes 4 to 6
Baked Frittata With Yogurt, Chard and Green Garlic
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

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.

50m6 servings
Tomato and Carrot Marinara Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

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.

30m2 1/4 cups (about eight servings)
Baked and Loaded Acorn Squash
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Baked and Loaded Acorn Squash

Sweeten your winter suppers with this loaded squash that can’t help but warm you up from stem to stern when partnered with pears, Granny Smiths, nutmeg, cinnamon and apple brandy.

1h 30m8 servings
Roasted Leeks and Potatoes Vinaigrette
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roasted Leeks and Potatoes Vinaigrette

I prefer using tiny whole potatoes for this elegant potato and leek salad if I can find them. Firm red potatoes or fingerlings are good alternatives.

1hServes four
Tapa of Mushrooms in Garlic Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Tapa of Mushrooms in Garlic Sauce

You find these mushrooms served in little ceramic casseroles at tapas bars all over Spain. It’s a simple hors d’oeuvre that can be made ahead and reheated. In Spain, it would be made with about four times as much olive oil and served in small ceramic cazuelas. You also can serve the mushrooms with toothpicks.

20mServes eight as part of an assortment of tapas
Quinoa and Beet Pilaf
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Quinoa and Beet Pilaf

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

20mServes 4 to 6
Coconut-Braised Beef
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Coconut-Braised Beef

1h 30m4 servings
Gremolata
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Gremolata

5m
Beets and Goat Cheese on a Bed of Spinach
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

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.

15m4 servings
Cooked Grains Salad With Tomato Vinaigrette
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cooked Grains Salad With Tomato Vinaigrette

You can use a variety of grains in this salad. I’ve made it with a mixture of brown rice and farro, with quinoa and with bulgur. The mixture makes a robust main-dish salad for summer.

5mServes four to six
Beet, Potato, Carrot, Pickle and Apple Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Beet, Potato, Carrot, Pickle and Apple Salad

This recipe was brought to The Times by Joan Nathan and was featured in her cookbook "Quiches, Kugels, and Couscous: My Search for Jewish Cooking in France." It's a hearty root vegetable salad enriched with hard-boiled eggs and tossed with a lively Dijon vinaigrette.

30m6 to 8 servings
Homemade Nondairy Yogurt
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Homemade Nondairy Yogurt

Of all the nondairy milks you could use for yogurt, cashew milk works best, turning pleasantly sour with an underlying sweetness. If you wish to go beyond cashew milk, and use soy milk, coconut milk or your homemade nut milk, our How to Make Yogurt guide can help, but whatever you choose, look for nondairy milk with the fewest possible ingredients, ideally just nuts, grains or pulses, and water. While not strictly necessary, the starch used here makes for a creamy, silky yogurt that’s still loose enough to stir. If you prefer a thicker yogurt, add a little more, or try the agar powder variation. Or leave the thickener out entirely for a thin, pourable yogurt that’s perfect for smoothies.

20m1 quart
Shrimp Risotto With Peas
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Shrimp Risotto With Peas

Shrimp shells are used here to make a subtle shellfish broth for the risotto. Make sure you don’t overcook the shrimp; they will take only four to five minutes to cook, and the contrast of their succulent texture against the chewy rice will be lost if the shrimp become rubbery.

1h 15mServes 4
Arroz Con Pollo Risotto
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Arroz Con Pollo Risotto

Why should anyone raise an eyebrow if an American chef decides to combine the best of an Italian cooking technique with a deservedly popular Spanish recipe? Anyone who says this Spanish-Italian creation is not authentic need only go in search of the only authentic recipe for arroz con pollo, or rice with chicken. For the Spanish-Italian variation, thanks go to Larry Wolhandler, the owner of Painter's Tavern in Cornwall-on-Hudson, N.Y. He is also responsible for its unwieldy name, arroz con pollo risotto, or rice with chicken rice. But the idea is clear: the ingredients are Spanish, the method of cooking the rice Italian. The result, with a few alterations, is a handsome and quick meal that would be complemented by a salad of orange slices and red onions with a few dribbles of olive oil.

30m3 servings
Oven-Baked Grains With Pecans and Maple Syrup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Oven-Baked Grains With Pecans and Maple Syrup

This is one of the two longer-cooking breakfast grain dishes this week. It takes about 1 hour 10 minutes in the oven, so it might be more practical for a weekend breakfast. Grits are much like polenta, and traditionally served as a savory dish, often with cheese added. Here I mixed the grits with the higher-protein millet, and liked the texture of the mix as well as the nuttier flavor. I warmed leftovers in my toaster oven and enjoyed this throughout the week.

1h 15mServes 6
Caramelized Honey-Baked Pears
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Caramelized Honey-Baked Pears

The flavor of cloves infuses these pears and their tawny syrup during their long stay in the oven. Two hours is a long time, but it’s worth it: the pears are transformed, and the syrup, which is not very sweet, is caramelized. The pears will be intact, but they’re so soft you can eat them with a spoon. They also make a nice breakfast with yogurt.

40mSix servings