Main Course

8665 recipes found

Rosemary and Pistachio Granola
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Rosemary and Pistachio Granola

This recipe came to The Times from the chef Steve Redzikowski of OAK fourteenth in Boulder, Colo., and moves granola out of the breakfast realm while still remembering its hippie roots. It is a savory mix, pairing rosemary and red-pepper flakes with a flourish of juniper berries. As with most granolas, simply mix the ingredients and toast them in a low oven until crisp. The result here makes for a substantial afternoon snack, but try it using it as a crust for red meat. It’s a surprising addition to dinner.

30m5 cups (4 to 6 servings)
Shiro (Ground-Chickpea Stew)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Shiro (Ground-Chickpea Stew)

Shiro is a simple, silky ground chickpea stew that takes little time and effort to bring together. In Eritrea and Ethiopia, it’s a most beloved and important dish — a vital source of flavor and protein. In those countries, it’s made with widely available shiro powder, a mixture of ground chickpeas, garlic, onion and spices. This version, based on Ghennet Tesfamicael’s recipe published in “In Bibi’s Kitchen,” by Hawa Hassan with Julia Turshen, cleverly suggests replacing shiro powder with chickpea flour and a homemade blend of berbere spice. You’ll be transported as your kitchen fills with the aroma of toasting warm spices and ground chilies. Traditionally, shiro is served alongside cooked greens and injera or other flatbreads. But it’s also delicious spread in a thick layer atop sourdough toast rubbed with garlic and finished with slices of tomato and a fried egg.

20m4 servings (about 5 cups)
Spicy Tunisian Carrot Frittata
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Spicy Tunisian Carrot Frittata

Tunisian frittatas are sometimes baked in an earthenware dish in the oven, sometimes on top of the stove. This one, adapted from a recipe by Clifford Wright, is made like an Italian frittata, but the spices are unmistakably Tunisian.

1hServes 6
Bruschetta With Chard or Spinach, Poached Egg and Dukkah
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Bruschetta With Chard or Spinach, Poached Egg and Dukkah

15m1 serving
Fried Eggs and Ramps
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fried Eggs and Ramps

The ramp, a kind of wild leek that heralds spring, pairs here with eggs for a particularly satisfying meal. Sizzled in a little butter, ramps make stellar scrambled eggs, and for not much more effort, a spectacular cheese omelet. In this recipe, wilted ramps are a great accompaniment for a couple of eggs fried sunny side up, with a pinch of peperoncino.

10m1 serving
Mixed Grains Risotto With Kale, Walnuts and Black Quinoa
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Mixed Grains Risotto With Kale, Walnuts and Black Quinoa

You may be surprised by the quantity of slivered kale that goes into this risotto. It will cook down as you stir and simmer the rice. Get into the habit of cooking and freezing grains ahead so you can make multigrain risottos like this without having to take the extra step of cooking the quinoa — though it only takes 15 to 20 minutes to cook this grain. Note that you might not use all of the stock; I just don’t like coming up short. Freeze what you don’t use.

45m6 servings
French Toast With Cinnamon Plums
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

French Toast With Cinnamon Plums

These plums can also be made in advance (though remember to reheat gently so the fruit doesn't fall apart) and their berried cinnamon-scented syrup drenches the sweet French toast gloriously. If you wish, you can remove the cooked plums and let the syrup reduce for a more intense, stickier sauce.

25m4 to 6 servings
Matzo, Lox, Eggs and Onions
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Matzo, Lox, Eggs and Onions

One morning during Passover, when I was eating matzo brei but dreaming about bagels and lox, it hit me. If I added smoked salmon to the matzo brei, I’d end up with a heartier twist on another Jewish staple: lox, eggs and onions.

10m4 servings
Matzo Brei With Hot Honey and Feta
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Matzo Brei With Hot Honey and Feta

When it comes to matzo brei (rhymes with fry), preferences run deep. Do you like yours salty and peppery, with crispy edges, or softer and sweeter, served with a drizzle of syrup or shower of confectioners’ sugar? This version leans savory, dotted with pockets of creamy feta and dill, but a slick of hot honey added at the end is a nod to the sweeter — albeit spicier — side. Serve it for breakfast, lunch or dinner, during Passover and beyond. It’s a quick, satisfying meal with verve to spare.

15m2 servings
Fennel Rice
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Fennel Rice

This is a simple Greek recipe, traditionally served at Lent, that works as a main or side dish. it calls for rice but can also be made with bulgur for a nuttier, heartier flavor.

1hServes 6
Shrimp Mofongo
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Shrimp Mofongo

According to Manolo Lopez, the Puerto Rican proprietor of the Smorgasburg food stand MofonGO, this mashed plantain dish is the “unofficial official dish of the islands.” Depending on the season, Mr. Lopez serves several versions — creole chicken, roast pork topped with a squiggle of pink Puerto Rican mayo-ketchup — all based on his mother’s recipe. Mr. Lopez makes the pork rinds from scratch; you don’t have to, but you should follow Mr. Lopez’ advice and eat this immediately after you make it. As mofongo cools, the mashed plantains begin to harden.

30m4 servings
Berbere-and-Mulberry-Glazed Duck
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Berbere-and-Mulberry-Glazed Duck

2h 30m2 to 4 servings
Hot Italian Sausage and Broccoli Rabe Frittata
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Hot Italian Sausage and Broccoli Rabe Frittata

This is a substantial baked frittata that feeds a small crowd. Filled with spicy Italian sausage, flavorful greens and four kinds of cheese, it tastes best at room temperature, and it's perfect for a weekend late breakfast or any time of day.

1h8 servings
Exciting Noodle Kugel
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Exciting Noodle Kugel

This savory kugel, a Jewish baked noodle pudding, comes from a 1950 spiral-bound cookbook that was compiled by the women of a synagogue in suburban Larchmont, N.Y. They called it Exciting Baked Noodles, and it included what were then considered secret ingredients: Worcestershire and Tabasco sauce. To update it, use high-quality pappardelle egg noodles, which add richness. A sprinkling of chives brings flecks of color to the finished casserole.

45m6 servings
Crispy Parmesan Eggs With Radicchio and Pea Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Crispy Parmesan Eggs With Radicchio and Pea Salad

The true stars of this main course salad are the Parmesan fried eggs, which have lacy, golden edges that are almost fricolike in their crunch. As the runny yolks leak onto the radicchio and vegetables, they mix with the lemony dressing, making the whole salad creamy and rich. It’s best to shred the Parmesan yourself, using the largest holes on your grater; the preground stuff is usually too fine. Then be sure to use a nonstick skillet or well-seasoned cast-iron pan to fry the eggs; otherwise, they are liable to glue themselves onto a regular pan. And if you aren’t an anchovy fan but still want to add a saline bite, a tablespoon of drained capers also works well.

40m2 to 4 servings
Wheat Berries With Spinach and Spring Onion
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Wheat Berries With Spinach and Spring Onion

You can use any of the ancient wheat varieties here – spelt, kamut or farro. You could also substitute other greens, like chard or beet greens, for the spinach.

1h 15m4 servings
Asparagus-Potato Hash With Goat Cheese and Eggs
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Asparagus-Potato Hash With Goat Cheese and Eggs

This colorful one-pan breakfast can be easily adapted to use up whatever vegetables you have in the crisper: Use shallots or yellow onion instead of leeks, or substitute green beans, snap peas or even broccoli for the asparagus. Just make sure everything is diced into 1/2-inch pieces so the vegetables cook evenly and quickly. Serve as part of an elegant brunch spread, with toast for a hearty (and vegetarian!) weekend breakfast, or eat it straight from the skillet with a glass of white wine as a quick, clean-out-the-fridge dinner.

30m4 servings
Blueberry-Banana Pancakes
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Blueberry-Banana Pancakes

30m6 servings
Asparagus Frittata With Burrata and Herb Pesto
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Asparagus Frittata With Burrata and Herb Pesto

Frittata, the savory Italian egg dish, can be thick or thin, flipped in the pan or finished under the broiler. This one, slathered with creamy burrata and drizzled with herb-laden oil, is a rather deluxe version of the ideal, worthy of a weekend lunch or a late dinner.

30m4 to 6 servings
Farro and Vegetable Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Farro and Vegetable Soup

This thick, hearty meal is inspired by a traditional Provençal harvest soup. Farro (spelt) and the softer emmer wheat are grains that were once peasant staples in the mountainous areas of Provence, though they are less common now. Traditionally, the grain is simmered with a mutton, prosciutto or ham bone. I use Parmesan rinds to enrich the flavor of this version.

3hServes six to eight
Classic Matzo Brei
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Classic Matzo Brei

In this matzo brei (rhymes with fry) recipe, the matzo sheets are browned in butter until crisp before being lightly scrambled with eggs. You make this either sweet or savory as you prefer. Add black pepper, plenty of salt and chives for a savory version, or Demerara sugar and maple syrup or honey if you would like something sweeter. It’s a fine breakfast or brunch any time of the year, and especially during Passover.

15m2 servings
Crunchy Noodle Kugel à la Great-Aunt Martha
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Crunchy Noodle Kugel à la Great-Aunt Martha

The genius of this sweet noodle kugel — the rich, custardy casserole that is a staple of Jewish cooking — is that its top is designed to offer maximum crunch while its interior remains creamy and luscious. The secret: use a jellyroll pan, which means that there is a greater amount of kugel surface area to brown in the oven, and bake it at a slightly higher temperature. Soaking the raisins in sherry or orange juice adds flavor, and also keeps them from burning in the extra-hot oven.

1h8 to 12 servings
Sorghum Bowl With Black Beans, Amaranth and Avocado
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Sorghum Bowl With Black Beans, Amaranth and Avocado

Sorghum reminds me of Israeli couscous, spherical and about the same size. Like Israeli couscous, it’s good with brothy stews. I love the way the firm, round grains stand up against the soft, brothy beans in this bean and amaranth stew. You can find amaranth at many farmers’ markets and Asian markets. The beautiful purple and green leaves are high in anthocyanins, known for their antioxidant properties, as are black beans. Substitute baby spinach if you can’t find it.

7h 30m6 servings
One-Pot French Onion Soup With Porcini Mushrooms
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

One-Pot French Onion Soup With Porcini Mushrooms

This version of the classic French soup simmers and bakes in a Dutch oven, while the toast broils right on top. Dried porcini mushrooms, fresh fennel and leeks provide deep umami flavor. Unless you have homemade beef stock on hand, go with a good chicken stock rather than boxed beef stock, which tastes mostly of salt. You could opt for vegetable stock for a vegetarian version, but skip the demi-glace, in that case. The preparation of this soup is time-consuming, but the flavor is well worth the effort. You can make the soup through Step 5 up to two days ahead of time. When ready to serve, reheat on the stove then continue with the final baking step for a hearty communal feast.

2h6 servings