Kosher

984 recipes found

Roasted Mushroom and Gruyère Sandwich
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Roasted Mushroom and Gruyère Sandwich

For this sandwich, you can also pan-fry the mushrooms, which give this sandwich a somewhat meaty quality. But in this case I used the toaster oven to roast the mushrooms. You’ll need only half of the roasted mushrooms for 1 sandwich but you’ll find a good use for the rest of them, I’m sure.

30mServes 1
Alsatian Pear Kugel With Prunes
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Alsatian Pear Kugel With Prunes

3h 15m6 to 8 servings
Pappardelle With Greens and Ricotta
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Pappardelle With Greens and Ricotta

This is the kind of pasta dish you could make for a dinner party when you have little time to prepare food in advance. Seek out fresh ricotta at Italian markets for best results.

30mServes four
Carrot Wraps
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Carrot Wraps

Chef Ana Sortun, a chef who has a wonderful restaurant in Cambridge called Oleana, presented a delicious carrot “shawarma” at the recent Worlds of Healthy Flavors conference at the Culinary Institute of America in St. Helena, Calif. Her husband is a farmer, and at this time of year she i’s always looking for ideas for using the carrots he grows. These wraps are inspired by Ana’s, but have a slightly less complex paste/sauce than hers. (It is also more Georgian than Turkish.).

30m6 servings
Georgian Cilantro Sauce
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Georgian Cilantro Sauce

Years ago, I found an intriguing recipe for a sauce similar to this one. I loved it, but it wasn’t until I read Dara Goldstein’s “The Georgian Feast,” from which this recipe is adapted, that I realized this sweet, pungent sauce is a mainstay of Georgian national cuisine, often served with grilled meat, chicken or vegetables.

1h 10m1 1/2 cups
Parsley Salad With Barley, Dill and Hazelnuts
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Parsley Salad With Barley, Dill and Hazelnuts

I was going to call this a barley salad with parsley, dill and hazelnuts, but it is really a parsley salad, like a Middle Eastern tabbouleh. The relatively small amount of barley contributes substance and a wonderful chewy texture, as do the hazelnuts. I prefer it on the lemony side so I use 3 tablespoons lemon juice, but I’ve given you a range.

1h 30mServes 4
Bulgur and Lentil Salad
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Bulgur and Lentil Salad

The best lentils for this hearty salad are French green lentils or black beluga lentils. They’re more likely to stay intact while cooking than brown lentils.

45mServes six
Confit Of Onions With Labneh Sauce
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Confit Of Onions With Labneh Sauce

45m1 cup
Bulgur Pilaf With Chickpeas and Herbs
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Bulgur Pilaf With Chickpeas and Herbs

This is the type of satisfying high-protein grain and legume dish that easily occupies the center of your dinner plate, accompanied by vegetables or a salad. Cook the chickpeas, then use the soaking water for reconstituting the bulgur. It couldn’t be a simpler dish to make.

1h 35mServes four to six
Colcannon With Roasted Squash and Apple
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Colcannon With Roasted Squash and Apple

This is the sweetest of the colcannons I experimented with this week. The apple is the secret ingredient. I roasted the squash with the apple, but pulled the apple out before the squash because it roasts more quickly at 425 degrees.

50mServes 6
Cantaloupe-Lime Agua Fresca With Chia Seeds
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Cantaloupe-Lime Agua Fresca With Chia Seeds

A light, refreshing blender drink that is sweet and a little bit tart. Although I make this in a blender, I think it qualifies as an agua fresca rather than a smoothie, as it is made with pure fruit, enriched with a spoonful of soaked chia seeds. The flavor of the drink will only be as good as your melon, so seek out the best cantaloupe, or other sweet orange melon, you can find. I don’t add sweetener to the drink, but you can if you think it needs a little something.

3m1 serving
Romaine Salad with Couscous Confetti
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Romaine Salad with Couscous Confetti

You can use regular couscous or Israeli couscous for this lemony, confetti-like mixture of couscous, mixed diced peppers and mint. I categorize this salad as a salad with grains rather than a grain salad (I know, couscous isn’t a grain, but it plays a grainy role here), as there’s more lettuce than couscous.

20mServes 6
Whole Wheat Bread, Apple and Cranberry Dressing
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Whole Wheat Bread, Apple and Cranberry Dressing

Having grown up with Pepperidge Farm stuffing, I will always have a weakness for bread stuffing seasoned with sage and thyme, with plenty of chopped onion and celery. I prefer to use 100 percent whole wheat bread, one that isn’t at all sweet. A mixed grains bread would also work. The apple and cranberries contribute sweetness, tartness and texture to the classic dressing. I bake this in a gratin dish; you can double the recipe if you want to use it for a stuffing as well, and put half inside the bird. But, moistened with a well seasoned vegetable stock, the dressing makes a great vegetarian side dish. Just be sure to use plenty of stock to moisten, as the problem with most stuffings that are baked outside the bird is that they are dry. Tender apples like McIntosh, Gala, Macoun and Cortland work well in this dish.

1h 30m
Bulgur and Walnut Kibbeh
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Bulgur and Walnut Kibbeh

These patties make a great destination for fine bulgur. Kibbeh (called kufteh in Persian and köfte in Turkish) are usually made with a mixture of ground meat and bulgur, but there are vegetarian versions as well. This mixture of bulgur and walnuts is pungent with garlic and fragrant with parsley and fresh mint. They make a nice appetizer.

40mAbout 24 kibbeh, serving six to eight as an appetizer
Bulgur Pilaf With Dried Fruit and Nuts
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Bulgur Pilaf With Dried Fruit and Nuts

40mServes six
Pearl Couscous With Sautéed Cherry Tomatoes
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Pearl Couscous With Sautéed Cherry Tomatoes

This is a simple dish with few ingredients and lots of flavor. The sauce, inspired by Melissa Clark’s pasta with burst cherry tomatoes, is incredibly sweet and wraps itself around each nugget of couscous in the most delicious way. Cherry tomatoes break down in a hot pan in about five minutes, collapsing just enough to release some juice, which quickly thickens and caramelizes a bit. You want the tomatoes to stay partially intact so that you don’t just get skins floating in sauce, but you need to cook them long enough to achieve the caramelized flavor that makes a tomato sauce sweet. You can cook the couscous a couple of days ahead and reheat in a pan with a little olive oil or in the microwave.

25m4 servings
Sautéed Apple Rings
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Sautéed Apple Rings

I came across this utterly simple idea in Deborah Madison’s “Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone.” She serves hers as a dessert with ice cream, a lovely use for the apples (which she also embellishes with raisins and pine nuts). I think they make a great addition to the Thanksgiving buffet, to go with the turkey along with cranberry sauce. Or serve them with your latkes next month! Breakfast is another meal where these are welcome, right on top of your whole wheat buttermilk pancakes. I find that the apples will caramelize most efficiently if you don’t crowd the pan, so I begin by sautéing the apples in 2 batches, then I combine the batches for the final addition of vanilla and optional brandy or calvados. Both tender apples like McIntosh, Gala, Macoun and Cortland, as well as firmer apples like Braeburns, work well in this dish.

30m6 servings
Pear Cranberry Galette
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Pear Cranberry Galette

I used Bartlett pears for this juicy galette, but pretty much any variety will work, as long as they’re not overly ripe.

3h1 9-inch galette, serving 8
Bitter Herbs Salad
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Bitter Herbs Salad

Bitter herbs – the maror – are part of the Seder ritual, symbolizing the bitterness of slavery experienced by the Jews in Egypt. Endive, romaine and chicory (for which I’ve substituted radicchio) are present on many Sephardic ritual platters, but often they also appear in salads served with the meal. This can be served as a separate course or as a side dish.

15m6 servings
Cochin Coriander-Cumin Chicken for Passover
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Cochin Coriander-Cumin Chicken for Passover

1h6 to 8 servings
Endive and Apple Salad
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Endive and Apple Salad

This salad came to The Times from Kathryn Anible, a personal chef in New York, whose solution to adding color to your winter table lies in this fresh, crunchy salad. “I just like it because the endive is not frequently used in salads, and it tends to be a little bitter,” she said. “The apple sweetens it up a little bit and makes it more approachable. It has a nice crunchy, fresh texture.”

20m4 servings
Greek Chicken and Tomato Salad
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Greek Chicken and Tomato Salad

A small amount of seared and roasted chicken breast transforms this tomato-centric Greek salad into something substantial enough to eat as a main dish for lunch or a light supper.

40mServes 4
Persimmon Spice Bread
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Persimmon Spice Bread

At my farmers’ market one vendor was selling over-ripe fuyu persimmons for $1 a pound and I bought a few pounds just to make purée, which I used for dense, sweet quick breads like this one and for muffins. According to Deborah Madison, persimmons contain enzymes that will react with the flour and prevent the bread from having a nice crumb, so you must first neutralize them by stirring baking soda into the purée. This also causes the purée to become gelatinous, but the gelatinous mash is easy to break up with a whisk and will dissolve when added to the batter. Freeze any leftover purée.

1h 30m1 9x5-inch loaf (12 slices)
Cucumber Salsa Salad
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Cucumber Salsa Salad

This salad, which resembles gazpacho, is a lovely, light way to begin a Mexican meal. Serve it atop lettuce leaves as a salad, or serve over rice. Alternately, use it as a sauce with fish, chicken or fajitas.

30mServes six