Main Course

8665 recipes found

Chicken and Escarole Salad With Anchovy Croutons
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chicken and Escarole Salad With Anchovy Croutons

Think of this salad as an umami-charged version of a classic Caesar. The central difference is that the egg yolk, which is typically emulsified into a creamy dressing, is plopped directly onto the lettuces, leaving you to break it and let it mingle with the salty, garlicky, lemony dressing, which is bolstered with a bit of soy sauce. (If the whole, raw egg yolks freak you out, swap them for jammy soft-boiled eggs or crispy fried eggs.) The true reason to make this salad, though, is that it’s adorned with chicken-fat-laced anchovy croutons, made in the oven while the chicken finishes cooking. They are worth the price of admission.

40m4 servings
Shredded Vegetable Socca
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Shredded Vegetable Socca

Socca is street food in Nice, in the South of France. This Los Angeles version, served at the restaurant Sqirl, makes it a meal by adding shredded vegetables to the chickpea pancake and tops it with greens and creamy labneh. This recipe calls for carrots, winter squash (Sqirl generally uses kabocha) or zucchini — pick one and proceed. Add a fried egg on top to make it heartier, if you'd like.

40m4 servings
Breaded and Broiled Blue Cod
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Breaded and Broiled Blue Cod

15m6 servings
Saag Aloo
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Saag Aloo

35m4 servings
Penne With Swiss Chard and Cauliflower
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Penne With Swiss Chard and Cauliflower

30m6 servings
Braised Cabbage
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Braised Cabbage

The chef Floyd Cardoz shared this recipe with The Times in 2011. “I personally love cabbage,” he said. At Tabla, his restaurant on Madison Square Park, he offered lightly caramelized cabbage wedges that had been spiced with cloves, black mustard seeds, shallots, garlic and ginger. Mr. Cardoz brought out the sweetness of the cabbage, and in the plating of it, its beauty.

30m3 servings
Simple Pencil Cob Breakfast Grits
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Simple Pencil Cob Breakfast Grits

Sometimes the taste of a humble, simple food can be a life-changing event. This recipe, courtesy of Kay Rentschler, creative director of Anson Mills, is a fail-safe method for making the mill’s luxuriously flavored heirloom grits. When properly cooked – over very low heat after an overnight soak – the resulting grits are incredibly creamy and almost as sweet as fresh corn. It is important to understand why you must cook these grits over the lowest possible heat: these are coarse grits, and if they are over-hydrated or boiled after they begin to thicken they will take forever to cook. (In technical terms, thickening is the point at which the first starch takes hold, or the point after continuous gentle stirring when the grits particles remain suspended in the liquid and you no longer have to stir continuously). Moreover, as Anson Mills founder Glenn Roberts explained to me, if the heat is too high the new crop flavors of the corn will be blown out, in the same way that the flavor of fresh herbs is diminished by high heat.

35mServes 4
Penne With Brussels Sprouts, Chile and Pancetta
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Penne With Brussels Sprouts, Chile and Pancetta

Pasta and sliced brussels sprouts make a good pair, the softened green shreds commingling with the chewy noodles in the sauce. Here that sauce is a simple one with big flavors: pancetta, rosemary, garlic and chile. The raw brussels are then added to the pan. A splash of lemon juice at the end is a bright touch. Within 30 minutes, dinner is ready. Vary this recipe at will — use regular bacon instead of pancetta, or skip the meat altogether and use extra cheese to make a satisfying vegetarian main course. Use a knife or a food processor (fitted with the slicing blade) to cut the brussels. A mandoline works too but isn’t necessary, because the brussels don’t need to be paper thin, or uniform in size. These are unfussy slices you can do by hand.

20m2 servings
Penne With Ricotta and Asparagus
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Penne With Ricotta and Asparagus

20mServes 4
Cracked Farro Risotto (Farrotto) With Parsley and Marjoram
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cracked Farro Risotto (Farrotto) With Parsley and Marjoram

Finally, a way to make something as comforting as an Italian rice risotto using farro. The chef Barry Maiden revealed this ingenious method to me. Soak the farro, drain and then crack the grains slightly in a food processor. This allows the thickly hulled wheat berries to release their starch, creating the creamy sauce that defines the dish. Farro has so much flavor and the resulting farrotto is much more robust than a rice risotto. It needs little more than fresh herbs as embellishment, but of course you could add any vegetable you like to use in risotto.

40mServes 4
Italian Meat Sauce With Half the Meat
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Italian Meat Sauce With Half the Meat

It’s been a long time since I have made tomato sauce with meat, and this one transported me back to the first recipe I learned to make. I called it spaghetti sauce, and it was a simple tomato sauce with ground beef. It didn’t taste that much different from this sauce, which has only a quarter pound of meat in it – but that is all it needs to have a rich flavor and a meaty texture. The mushroom base is a perfect stand-in for half the meat; you could double the amount for a vegetarian sauce.

35m3 cups, or enough for 9 pasta servings
Grilled Albacore With Yogurt-Dill Sauce on a Bed of Arugula
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Grilled Albacore With Yogurt-Dill Sauce on a Bed of Arugula

This is based on a recipe for red mullet from “Classic Turkish Cooking” by Ghillie Basan. Red mullet isn’t so easy to come by in the United States, and albacore works well here. In the authentic Turkish dish, the red mullet is marinated in a mixture of onion juice and lemon juice with bay leaf. This step is optional; it tenderizes the fish and adds terrific flavor, but grilled albacore is nice enough on its own. Dill is the traditional herb for this recipe, but mint is very nice as well.

2h 15mServes 4
Silvano Marchetto's Penne All'Arrabiata
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Silvano Marchetto's Penne All'Arrabiata

30m4 to 6 servings
Gingery Cabbage Rolls With Pork and Rice
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Gingery Cabbage Rolls With Pork and Rice

These fork-tender cabbage rolls, filled with savory pork, rice and ginger, are the ultimate comfort food — perfect to serve as a cozy meal on a cold night. When assembling the rolls, you can simply fold the cabbage leaf onto itself as you would fold a burrito — and don’t worry if the cabbage leaves tear. If there are any leftovers, reheat them with more chicken broth. They are good the day they are made, but even better the next day.

4h12 cabbage rolls (4 to 6 servings)
Penne Alla Vodka
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Penne Alla Vodka

Penne alla vodka is the perfect recipe for easy entertaining: short pasta is easier to cook in quantity than long strands and the sauce is amusingly retro -- think 1960s Rome, where the dish originated. But it is seriously good.

45m8 to 10 servings
Meatloaf With Cheddar Cheese
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Meatloaf With Cheddar Cheese

1h 15mSix to eight servings
Finnish Pancakes
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Finnish Pancakes

Outside Thunder Bay, you won’t find many places that serve the Hoito’s style of Finnish pancakes, which bear no resemblance to fluffy American-style pancakes. At the restaurant, they are each the size of a dinner plate, heavy and dense.

20m6 8-inch pancakes
Egg White Frittata With Leeks
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Egg White Frittata With Leeks

25m1 to 2 servings
Chicken Kebab, Turkish Style
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chicken Kebab, Turkish Style

45m4 servings
Strata With Mushrooms and Chard
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Strata With Mushrooms and Chard

I make stratas — savory bread puddings — when I find myself with a stale baguette on hand, even if it’s so hard that the only way to slice it is to saw it. A strata is as comforting as macaroni and cheese, and it makes a great one-dish meal.

2hServes four to six
Chicken Pot Pie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chicken Pot Pie

30mFour to five servings
Florence Fabricant's Penne With Artichokes And Mushrooms
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Florence Fabricant's Penne With Artichokes And Mushrooms

1h4 servings
Celery Risotto With Dandelion Greens or Kale
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Celery Risotto With Dandelion Greens or Kale

Celery is both vegetable and aromatic in this risotto. It retains some texture as it cooks, contrasting nicely with the rice. Dandelion greens are very nice here, but you can usually only find them in a farmers’ market; kale, especially dark green cavolo nero, is a fine substitute.

1hServes 4 to 5 generously
Turkish-Style Lamb Boreks
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Turkish-Style Lamb Boreks

These irresistible savory pastries go by many names throughout the Middle East. In Turkey, they are called boreks and the best ones have a beguiling, complex filling that features salty, sweet and sour elements. If you can’t find pomegranate molasses, substitute lemon juice and honey, and maybe a splash of sweet vinegar. It’s easy to cut these large boreks into two, three or four pieces, for feeding a crowd.

1h8 large servings, or up to 32 small bites