Lunch

2813 recipes found

Swiss Chard Rice Bowl With Chorizo
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Swiss Chard Rice Bowl With Chorizo

Jessica Koslow, the owner of Sqirl in Los Angeles, started making rice bowls as way to showcase Kokuho Rose brown rice, a particularly nutty and perfumed heirloom variety grown in Northern California. She has a varied roster of preparations, all of which will work with any good quality brown rice. In this recipe, Swiss chard stems and leaves are seasoned with toasted garlic, cumin and smoked paprika before being mixed into the rice; a crisp chorizo patty adorns the top. If you’d rather leave out the chorizo, you can top this with a fried egg or fried tofu instead.

1h2 to 3 servings
Molly O'Neill's Beef Broth
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Molly O'Neill's Beef Broth

2h 30mAbout 12 cups
Crispy Pork Cheek, Belly or Turkey-Thigh Salad
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Crispy Pork Cheek, Belly or Turkey-Thigh Salad

6 to 8 servings
Cabbage and Pepper Chakchoukah
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Cabbage and Pepper Chakchoukah

This is a spicy Tunisian pepper stew with poached eggs, called chakchoukah. In this version, cabbage is substituted for some of the peppers in the traditional version.

1hServes 6
Duck and Andouille Etouffée
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Duck and Andouille Etouffée

Roux becomes the base for this étouffée, which uses plenty of smoky, chunky Cajun andouille and well-seasoned chopped duck meat. If you have a favorite Chinese barbecue restaurant, you can buy a duck there. Even grocery store rotisserie chicken will work.

55m8 servings
Beef Bone Broth
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Beef 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.

5h 45mAbout 3 quarts
Roasted Vegetable Garbure
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Roasted Vegetable Garbure

5h 15mFour servings
Jean Marsh's Melton Mowbray Pie
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Jean Marsh's Melton Mowbray Pie

2h 45m10 servings
Scallop Gumbo
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Scallop Gumbo

Gumbo is like many regional dishes: there are nearly as many interpretations as there are cooks. Most include the common Louisiana trinity of vegetables: green peppers, celery and onion. Some include meat, often a spicy sausage like andouille, in addition to or in place of shellfish. And while some gumbos rely on okra as a thickener, others use a roux, a combination of flour and fat cooked until brown and tasty. What I like about this gumbo is that it borrows a little from many approaches to create a lighter, more contemporary dish: a one-pot meal that’s ideal for any occasion calling for a crowd-pleaser.

1h6 to 8 servings
Soft-Shell Crabs With Curry Butter
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Soft-Shell Crabs With Curry Butter

Fans of soft-shell crab look forward to the season — late spring and early summer — with feverish anticipation. The entire delicious crab is edible and may be prepared in many ways; deep-fried, grilled or pan-cooked. Here they are sautéed in a spicy curry butter, which complements the crabs’ rich flavor. (The recipe makes more butter than is needed for this dish, but is wonderful to have on hand. Use extra for cooking vegetables or eggs.) Serve 1 large or 2 small soft-shell crabs per person.

30m4 servings
Green Garlic and Butter Clams
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Green Garlic and Butter Clams

10m4 servings
Green Garlic Toast
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Green Garlic Toast

Green garlic is harvested while still immature, before the bulb has a chance to fully develop the cloves we know so well. It looks a lot like a scallion, with a mild garlic flavor that’s bright and fresh tasting. You can use both the white and green tender green parts of the stalk, trimming away any yellowing or woody parts near the top. In this recipe, minced raw green garlic is mixed with butter, Parmesan and chives, then used to top toast. It’s pungent, herbal and sweet with a bite from the chile flakes. Serve these plain, or top with any number of embellishments – sliced avocado, sliced tomatoes, dollops of ricotta cheese, fillets of anchovies or sardines. They make an excellent nibble with drinks, or serve a large portion with a salad for a light lunch. If you’re not using it immediately, the green garlic butter will freeze well for up to 3 months. And the piquant butter can also be used to cook eggs, or tossed with asparagus, pasta or rice.

15m8 servings
Old Stone Fish Stew
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Old Stone Fish Stew

30mSix servings
Sesame-Crusted Pork Cutlets With Cabbage
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Sesame-Crusted Pork Cutlets With Cabbage

Do you ever wish that the crackly outside of your fried cutlet tasted like — anything? Instead of throwing a bunch of garlic or even Cheetos into the coating, swap bread crumbs for a something that’s probably already in your pantry. By crusting your pounded-thin pork with crushed sesame seeds and shallow-frying for just a few minutes, each bite of juicy pork has a snap and crackle racing through, in addition to deep sesame flavor. To cut through the richness, take a cue from pork tonkatsu and serve these with extra-crisp wisps of cabbage and lemon. With such a minimalist ingredient list and process, you might think you need to add a thing or two, but everything you need is right here.

20m4 to 6 servings
Lamb Flatbread With Za’atar
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Lamb Flatbread With Za’atar

A favorite Middle Eastern street snack is a small freshly baked flatbread, brushed with a mixture of olive oil and za’atar, the flavorful Middle Eastern spice mixture that contains wild thyme, sumac and sesame seeds. It is uncommonly good. For a more complex, pizzalike flatbread, this recipe adds spiced ground lamb and feta, along with a shower of herbs. But if you simply want the plain za’atar version, omit the lamb topping altogether.

2h 30m8 (6-inch) flatbreads
Lobster Butter
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Lobster Butter

This is a Yankee take on the classic French recipe for beurre de homard, which incorporates cooked lobster meat into a compound butter. It is thriftier, using the shells to bring flavor instead of the lobster meat, but is no less delicious for that. The process is akin to making a lobster stock, with butter in place of water. Use the lobster butter as a melted dip for shrimp or yet more lobster, or as a topping for sautéed scallops or fish.

45m1/2 cup
Spicy Grilled Squid and Green Bean Salad
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Spicy Grilled Squid and Green Bean Salad

Everyone loves calamari, but grilling is an easy, delicious alternative to frying. Grill the squid whole, then slice it into rings to serve warm or at room temperature, dressed with an assertive vinaigrette — in this case, with ginger, hot pepper, sesame oil and scallions. Cooking over hot coals adds a smoky note, but a stovetop grill works well, too. Any size squid may be prepared this way, but meaty larger squid works best. And, if grilling isn't a possibility, whole squid can also be broiled or roasted.

30m4 servings
Stuffed Squid Sicilian-Style
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Stuffed Squid Sicilian-Style

Squid (or calamari, its Italian name) can be prepared in a variety of ways — fried, braised, grilled and roasted — and all are good. In this recipe whole squid are stuffed before roasting with a bread crumb filling that contains typical Sicilian ingredients like chard, fennel, anchovy, pecorino and pine nuts.

1h4 to 6 servings
Saffroned Mussel And Lobster Chowder
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Saffroned Mussel And Lobster Chowder

1hFour servings
Pacific Calamari Salad
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Pacific Calamari Salad

2h 30m8 servings
Curried Tomato Soup
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Curried Tomato Soup

16m4 servings
Chilled Curried Pea Soup
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Chilled Curried Pea Soup

1h 20mFour servings
Cold Bisque Of Tomato and Sorrel
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Cold Bisque Of Tomato and Sorrel

15m6 to 8 servings
Cream Of Sorrel Soup With Root Vegetables
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Cream Of Sorrel Soup With Root Vegetables

30mFour to five servings