Lunch

2804 recipes found

Roasted Broccoli and Potato Tacos With Fried Eggs
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Roasted Broccoli and Potato Tacos With Fried Eggs

These weeknight tacos are packed with nutrient-dense broccoli and comforting potatoes for a satisfying meal that comes together in just 45 minutes. The secret to its flavor lies in roasting the vegetables over high heat without stirring, which allows their edges to become smoked and crisp. Creamy egg yolks and deep, smoky paprika meld here, to create a rich sauce. If you’re short on time, you can roast the vegetables ahead of time and rewarm them, or even serve them at room temperature. Corn tortillas are used here, but flour tortillas can also be used. And feel free to customize them as you like, using all the suggested toppings or just some.

45m4 servings
Beans and Garlic Toast in Broth
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Beans and Garlic Toast in Broth

A simple dish of creamy, thin-skinned beans and broth on toast is easy to make, and a comfort to eat alone or feed a crowd. If you make the beans ahead of time, they can keep in the fridge for 3 days, but may need a splash of water added when you heat them up. The broth is a great way to make use of parmigiano rinds, if you happen to be saving those, but if you don’t have any lying around, you can still make it rich with umami: Whisk a heaped tablespoon of white miso with a little of the bean broth to make it smooth and lump-free, then add it back to the pot. It will add a similar, savory depth. The dish seems plain, but it won’t be if you season the broth well, and garnish each bowl generously with olive oil, grated cheese and herbs, just before you eat it.

4h4 servings
Brown Sugar Frozen Yogurt And Berries
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Brown Sugar Frozen Yogurt And Berries

30m6 servings
Chicken Tagine With Rhubarb
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Chicken Tagine With Rhubarb

The idea was to make something resembling a classic Moroccan chicken tagine with green olives and preserved lemon, but to swap out the salty, tart preserved lemon for sweeter, tart poached rhubarb. My idea worked; the dish has been a great success at more than one dinner party, and it will be a standby as long as the rhubarb lasts.

1h 15m4 to 6 servings
Collard Greens Tagine With Flageolets
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Collard Greens Tagine With Flageolets

I call the dish a tagine because it tastes like a Tunisian stew; its warm triumvirate of spices — coriander, cumin and caraway — are always present in the classic Tunisian spice mix called tabil. It is inspired by the Tunisian tagines I make to serve with couscous, but I served this instead with whole grain flatbread. Since my version is vegetarian, I cooked the onions and fennel in olive oil before adding them to the beans so the dish would have a bit of fat and the vegetables would have more flavor.

8h6 servings
Buckwheat Blini With Caviar
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Buckwheat Blini With Caviar

The holidays present a number of opportunities to splurge, and New Year’s Eve is the ultimate night for it. Though it may seem a cliché, the classic combination of blini and caviar is the perfect example — indulgent, elegant and delectable to the extreme. If you are hosting a small crowd for drinks (preferably Champagne or vodka with these), it’s all you need to serve, though it also can be a sit-down first course. Preparation is simple: the blini are topped with a dab of crème fraîche, a spoonful of caviar and a drizzle of butter.

3h 15mAbout 60 3-inch blini, 10 to 12 servings
Lentil and Pumpkin Tagine
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Lentil and Pumpkin Tagine

1h6 servings
Melon With Red Chili Flakes, Salt and Lime
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Melon With Red Chili Flakes, Salt and Lime

Skewered melon with chili, salt and lime juice, served as a snack or part of a larger meal, is as unexpected as it is compulsively edible. It's also easily assembled and takes no time, and rewards with layers of flavor.

10m4 servings
Chicken Blintzes with Wild Mushrooms
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Chicken Blintzes with Wild Mushrooms

These are not your average blintzes. Elegant and savory, they are as good for a midnight supper as they are for brunch. Though the recipe is a bit complex, it can be parceled out into a series of small, manageable chores; both the pancakes and filling can be prepared up to 2 days ahead, and once the blintzes are assembled, they can wait in the fridge as well. The final step of browning and crisping the blintzes in butter is almost no work at all.

2h 30m8 to 10 servings
Thai-Style Coconut Curry Chicken Tacos
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Thai-Style Coconut Curry Chicken Tacos

This weeknight chicken dish takes advantage of super flavorful jarred curry paste and pairs it with silky coconut milk to create a meal that comes together in just 20 minutes. Each step in this deceptively simple dish coaxes maximum flavor out of relatively few ingredients: Toasting the curry paste in the pan concentrates its taste, searing the chicken in the mixture ensures it's properly coated, and simmering in creamy coconut milk tenderizes the meat. A splash of lime juice and a spoonful of pico de gallo brighten and lighten the rich curry. Fold the mixture into tacos or try the curry chicken as a topping for grain bowls, cauliflower rice, sautéed broccoli or leafy greens.

25m4 servings
Marinated Vegetables Dijon
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Marinated Vegetables Dijon

15m4 servings
Five-Spice Crisp-Fried Squid
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Five-Spice Crisp-Fried Squid

In most Chinese restaurants, so-called “Salt and Pepper-Style” shrimp or squid usually contain other spices too. A good dose of 5-spice mixture makes these fried squid especially tasty, and dusting them with cornstarch before frying keeps them delicately crisp. Maintain the oil temperature at 375 degrees, and don’t try to fry too many pieces at once.

45m4 to 6 servings
Spicy Corn and Shishito Salad
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Spicy Corn and Shishito Salad

In this recipe, shishito peppers are sliced, lightly sautéed, then tossed with raw summer corn and a cumin-lime vinaigrette for a summer salad that’s crunchy, smoky and a little spicy. Traditionally used in Japanese and Korean cooking, shishitos are small, thin-skinned green peppers that have become increasingly popular in the United States. They are typically mild in flavor, but the occasional pepper packs a spicy punch. If you can’t find them, use diced green bell peppers in their place. Finally, cilantro-averse cooks can substitute fresh mint.

15m4 servings
Quiche With Red Peppers and Spinach
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Quiche With Red Peppers and Spinach

The real spring vegetable here is the spinach, lush and beautiful at this time of year. You can always get red peppers in a supermarket, and when you cook them for a while, as you do here, even the dullest will taste sweet. I make the pepper mixture first, then wilt the spinach in the same pan and line the tart shell with the savory mix. If you can, make the pepper and spinach filling a day ahead. It dries out a little if it sits overnight in the refrigerator and is less likely to dilute the custard.

1h 30m6 generous servings
Roasted Potato And Cabbage Soup
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Roasted Potato And Cabbage Soup

45m4 servings
Cumin-Roasted Salmon With Cilantro Sauce
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Cumin-Roasted Salmon With Cilantro Sauce

Roasting a whole fillet of fish might seem like a weekend-only treat, but cooking salmon this way is a luxury you should allow yourself on any old Tuesday, as it requires no additional preparation or skill. Be sure to slather the vinegary herb sauce on the still-warm salmon to allow the warm spices and fresh herbs to get to know each other better.

30m3 to 4 servings
Craig Claiborne’s Chicken Salad Sandwich
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Craig Claiborne’s Chicken Salad Sandwich

Originally printed in 1981, here is Craig Claiborne’s take on the classic chicken salad sandwich. In his version, a combination of mayonnaise (preferably homemade) and yogurt is used which yields a lighter, tangier sandwich filling. He calls for using poached chicken, but the leftover roast chicken from last night would work beautifully as well.

15m4 to 6 servings
Ermina Apolinario’s Canja
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Ermina Apolinario’s Canja

1hSix servings
Zucchini And Cheddar Cheese Soup
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Zucchini And Cheddar Cheese Soup

40mSix servings
Sausage With Chard and Rhubarb
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Sausage With Chard and Rhubarb

This quick sausage dish is perfect for spring. The dark green chard adds freshness, while the rhubarb lends a citrus-like sour note that cuts through the richness of the sausages. If you don’t have any mustard seeds on hand, leave them out. While they do add a pleasant heat and gentle crunch, you won’t miss them if you didn’t know they were supposed to be there. Use any kind of sausage you like here: pork, duck, lamb or turkey all work well with the rhubarb and greens.

25m2 servings
Chicken Salad With Tarragon Mayonnaise
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Chicken Salad With Tarragon Mayonnaise

1h4 servings
Crustless Pizza
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Crustless Pizza

15mabout 16 wedges
Spicy Fried Chicken Salad
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Spicy Fried Chicken Salad

45m4 servings
Chicken Salad With Lime and Red Onions
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Chicken Salad With Lime and Red Onions

1h6 servings