Lunch

2800 recipes found

Spam Musubi
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Spam Musubi

Spam, the love-it-or-hate-it canned ham, was introduced in 1937 and gained popularity during World War II, when more than 150 million pounds were shipped to American troops overseas. Soldiers introduced it to locals, who used the product to create spin-offs of regional dishes like Japanese onigiri and Korean budae jjigae. According to Hormel Foods Corporation, residents of Hawaii eat more Spam than those of any other state. A popular way to eat it there is in the tradition of Japanese omusubi: Stack a pan-fried slice of Spam and a rice patty and wrap a piece of roasted nori around it. This version of the dish is adapted from “Aloha Kitchen: Recipes From Hawai‘i,” a cookbook of classic Hawaiian dishes by Alana Kysar.

20m8 servings
Two-Bean and Tuna Salad
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Two-Bean and Tuna Salad

This is the most amazing version of tuna and bean salad I’ve ever tasted. It incorporates crunchy green beans, a red onion made a little milder by soaking in water, tuna and a bean of your choice. I’ve used a lush bean called Good Mother Stallard, which really makes this salad stand out. You can substitute borlotti beans, pinto or white beans. If you’re using canned beans, rinse them first. Whichever bean you choose, you’ll have an amazing light and satisfying meal.

15m6 Servings
Steamed Artichokes
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Steamed Artichokes

Serve the artichokes hot, warm, at room temperature or cold.

45m
Cold Celery Soup With Pink Radishes
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Cold Celery Soup With Pink Radishes

30mFour servings
Chicken Soup With Flanken
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Chicken Soup With Flanken

Hana says: Take the flanken and chicken out of the soup when it's nearly done, and serve them separately. Leave the shinbone in so the meat is falling off the bone.

4h6 to 8 servings
Penne Pasta With Ginger and Basil
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Penne Pasta With Ginger and Basil

20m4 servings
Brown Soda Bread Loaf With Caraway Seeds and Rye
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Brown Soda Bread Loaf With Caraway Seeds and Rye

Some regional variations on Irish soda bread, from Donegal and Leitrim, call for caraway seeds. I love caraway seeds in bread, but in my personal food memory bank they will always be paired with rye. So I decided to add a little rye flour to this already dark brown, grainy and moist bread.

1h1 loaf, about 12 slices
Pesto-Stuffed Portobello Burgers
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Pesto-Stuffed Portobello Burgers

30m
Fresh Mozzarella, Tomato and Olive Pizza Pockets
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Fresh Mozzarella, Tomato and Olive Pizza Pockets

The traditional reason for wrapping ingredients in pastry — be it Cornish pasties, Jamaican meat patties or even pizza pockets and knishes — is to make an edible container that facilitates transport and obviates the need for niceties like forks and plates. These pizza pockets couldn't be easier to make, and they are delicious whether eaten with a knife and fork or your fingers.

45m4 servings
Fava Bean Soup with Mint
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Fava Bean Soup with Mint

Although this looks like a Mediterranean soup, I came across it in Veracruz, where the cuisine still has Spanish overtones. I have eaten a similar fava bean dish in Spain. You can find skinned, split fava beans in Middle Eastern markets.

2h 15mServes 6
Steak Mock Frites
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Steak Mock Frites

There is no better, more reliable restaurant dish than steak frites. It is perhaps America's favorite French food, a cheeseburger deluxe recast for date nights, celebrations, feasts. Few make the dish at home, though: The frites are too labor-intensive for all but the most project-oriented cooks. Here, then, is a recipe to fake out the fries, one that will take even a relatively neophyte home cook little more than an hour to make. The aim is great steak, a delicious sauce of maître d'hôtel butter, and potatoes with a terrific quality of French fry-ness, supreme crispness, with soft and creamy flesh within. (Here's a video to get you started on how to cook the perfect steak at home.)

1h4 servings
Grains and Beans
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Grains and Beans

A play on Southern red beans and rice, this is a spicy, filling and highly nutritious dish. To make this meat-free, leave out the bacon, or substitute sliced mushrooms fried in olive oil for depth of flavor. But do use the hot sauce, preferably one with a vinegar bite to brighten up the dense heartiness of beans and grains.

2h6 servings
Cheddar, Cucumber and Marmalade Sandwiches
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Cheddar, Cucumber and Marmalade Sandwiches

Melissa Clark came up with this recipe in 2011, a sandwich for her daughter, against the one she made for herself with Branston pickle in place of the marmalade. (Branston pickle is a British pickled chutney, made with vegetables, that dates back to the early 20th century.) You can certainly make the grown-up version. But this sweet, salty, cool variety is close to perfect for lunch or a light dinner.

5m4 sandwiches
Baked Risotto With Winter Squash
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Baked Risotto With Winter Squash

This is not a classic stirred risotto, in which broth is added little by little, requiring the cook to stir and stir. Instead, the rice is tossed with squash and cheese then baked under a layer of bread crumbs until fragrant and browned on top. Welcome as a hearty meatless main course, it may also be served alongside a roasted chicken. Use any kind of hard winter squash, such as butternut, kabocha or Hubbard. Here are more great risotto recipes.

1h6 to 8 servings
Crab Louis
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Crab Louis

10m4 servings
Grilled Skirt Steak With Garlic and Herbs
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Grilled Skirt Steak With Garlic and Herbs

Grilling might just be the best way to cook up a skirt steak. The intense heat gives the succulent and flavorful cut a rich char that’s smoky and crisp at the edges. The trick is to get the fire hot enough and dry off any marinade before placing the meat on the grill. This will give you the deepest sear. Here, the meat is marinated in a garlicky herb paste flecked with pickled pepperoncini chiles. Other pickled peppers will work, too, so feel free to substitute pickled jalapeños if that’s what you’ve got. Or use a fresh jalapeño and a dash of pickle juice to get a similar hot and vinegary punch. Lastly, be sure not to overcook the meat. Rare to medium rare guarantees tender beef.

1h8 servings
Peanut Butter and Pickle Sandwich
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Peanut Butter and Pickle Sandwich

This sandwich does not necessarily need a recipe, given its simplicity. But it’s an unlikely pairing, is peanut butter and pickle, and sometimes that is what a recipe is for -- to prod you in a direction that you never considered. Dwight Garner, a book critic for The Times, makes a strong case for this, his favorite sandwich, calling it “a thrifty and unacknowledged American classic.” The vinegary snap of the pickles tempers the unctuousness of the peanut butter, and it’s an unusual pantry sandwich for when luncheon meats leave you cold.

1m1 sandwich
Summerfield Vegetable Soup
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Summerfield Vegetable Soup

1h 20m6 to 8 servings
Spiced Lamb Skewers With Lemony Onions
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Spiced Lamb Skewers With Lemony Onions

This is the type of scalable recipe that is ideal for feeding large groups of people in a short period of time. More snack than a meal, the idea is to build a table of these lightly spiced, grilled skewers (if you don't like lamb, then pork, beef or chicken all work) and fill out the rest of your table with store-bought ingredients like pickles, olives, yogurt and flatbread for sopping it all up. 

25m4 to 6 servings
Caviar Sandwich
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Caviar Sandwich

I now prefer the caviar sandwich to all other more classic presentations at the holidays. All that caviar crammed into a sandwich makes me feel giddy and extravagant and very lucky to be alive the second I set eyes on it. Context is everything; what I could reasonably splurge for would feel forlorn if showcased on a proper silver trolley atop a mound of shaved ice with a mother-of-pearl spoon at the ready on its nearby velvet pillow, but here, by contrast, in the context of a lowly sandwich, it feels as decadent as if I were eating caviar straight out of the tin, like a midnight pint of ice cream. Buy the caviar you most prefer from a retailer you trust the most—the most expensive may by no means necessarily be your favorite-- and see if this luscious sandwich doesn’t make you feel pretty giddy, too.

30m2 to 4 servings
Puree of Chickpea Soup
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Puree of Chickpea Soup

Most chickpea soups, whether savory minestrones or spicy North African stews, are rustic and hearty. This one is delicate, a puree that will have a particularly velvety texture if you take the time to strain it after you puree it.

8h 30mServes four
Green Lasagna With Bolognese Sauce and Bechamel
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Green Lasagna With Bolognese Sauce and Bechamel

No doubt about it, this lasagna is a project, but if you’ve never made fresh pasta, here’s an excellent place to start. Using fresh pasta in lasagna transforms it into another dish altogether: instead of falling off the fork into a slippery mass of naked noodles and separate sauce, it holds together beautifully. The sauce cooks into and holds fast to the toothsome pasta, making it stick together like layer cake. The kale flavor in the pasta is faint (you can leave it out) but adds another breath of green to the aromatic fresh basil and crisp fried sage.

5h12 servings
Chanclas Poblanas (Chorizo Sandwiches With Tomato-Guajillo Salsa)
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Chanclas Poblanas (Chorizo Sandwiches With Tomato-Guajillo Salsa)

Sold in the markets and street stalls of Puebla, chanclas poblanas are made with a slightly flattened, flour-dusted, oval-shaped bun called pan para chanclas which gets its rise and flavor from pulque, a fermented alcoholic drink made from the maguey plant. (Chancla, which means flip-flop or sandal, refers to the shape.) Then, they’re opened and stuffed with chorizo and bathed in a rich tomato-guajillo salsa. They’re messy, but they can be eaten with your hands or a fork and a knife.

45m4 servings
Mediterranean Cucumber and Yogurt Salad With Red or Black Quinoa
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Mediterranean Cucumber and Yogurt Salad With Red or Black Quinoa

The idea of embellishing a yogurt soup or salad with quinoa comes from Deborah Madison, who uses black quinoa in a brilliant recipe for a soup in her book “Vegetable Literacy.” I used red quinoa to add texture, color and substance to this typical Mediterranean combination – finely diced cucumber, garlic, and thick plain yogurt. Use mint or dill, or a combination, and make sure to dice the cucumber very small.

30mServes 4