Main Course

8665 recipes found

Peking Duck With Honey and Five-Spice Glaze
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Peking Duck With Honey and Five-Spice Glaze

Peking duck is one of the most famous and popular Chinese dishes. The traditional method is grand and laborious, requiring three days of intense preparation. This recipe simplifies that method for a home version that comes pretty close to the original. For that coveted crisp, golden skin, all the excess fat is trimmed, and the skin is separated from the meat. The duck is then air-dried overnight and roasted vertically to ensure even cooking, while rendering out the fat. The crunchiest skin comes from the duck’s backside and legs, so carve them off first to maintain their crackly texture. A simple honey and five-spice glaze creates a beautiful mahogany lacquer on the finished duck.

2h4 servings
Colcannon With Crispy Leeks
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Colcannon With Crispy Leeks

An Irish dish of mashed potatoes and greens, colcannon is one of the most nourishing, comforting dishes you could make. The fried leeks aren’t traditional: Usually, the alliums are stewed more slowly in butter, if they’re used at all. But they lend a deeper flavor, and a crisp, savory finish. For a full meal, crown it with a fried egg or some smoked salmon, or serve a simple green salad on the side. (This recipe is part of the From the Pantry series, started in the days after the coronavirus lockdown.)

45m4 servings
Lobster Chowder
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Lobster Chowder

Dick Bridges, a Maine lobsterman, gave this recipe to The Times in 2007, and we've adapted it here. It's a stew that's both humble and luxurious, making it the perfect dish to serve for a late-fall or winter dinner party.

50m12 servings
Ham And Chutney Sandwiches
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Ham And Chutney Sandwiches

5mFour servings
Roast Goose
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Roast Goose

Here is a bird that throws off a lot of beautiful fat in the oven. You will use some of it to cook the potatoes that go in the roasting pan for the final hour of cooking, but you will have taken off quite a bit before that as well. You can save that goose fat, covered, in the refrigerator for a few weeks, until the next time you want incredible roast potatoes. The British serve roast goose with a sauce of onions sauteed in goose fat, then stewed in milk and cream and thickened with old bread. But I prefer something tart rather than rich — a cranberry relish, for instance, sweetened but not overly so.

3h 15mServes 10 to 12.
Cabbage And Sparerib Soup
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Cabbage And Sparerib Soup

2h 30m10 to 12 servings
Paella of the Land
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Paella of the Land

This recipe, which was adapted from one Valerie Gurdal cooked in the 2013 running of the Westport Paella Contest in Westport, Massachusetts, and brought to The Times by John Willoughby, is classical in its use of rabbit, chorizo, Spanish ham and Calasparra rice. But its depths of flavors are increased exponentially by grilling the meats before adding them to the paella pan. Cooked over an open fire, the dish may be scary to contemplate, but it is not at all difficult to pull off.

1h 30mabout 12 servings
Grits and Shrimp
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Grits and Shrimp

This recipe, adapted from the chefs David Chang and Joaquin Baca of Momofuku Noodle Bar, came to The Times in 2006. Here, the yolk from soft egg bleeds into a bed of grits. A bit of chopped bacon adds smokiness, while the chopped scallion lends brightness. You'll want to use good quality grits here over cornmeal or polenta, as both Mr. Chang and Mr. Baca suggest. The result is luxurious and creamy, without any cream.

30m2 main course servings or 4 starters
Crown Roast of Lamb
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Crown Roast of Lamb

The crown rib roast is one of the most festive and serviceable cuts of meat, beautifully proportioned and wieldy, with luscious, lean red meat at the chop end tapering off into rustic, fatty and crispy rib bits at the bone end, with a built-in handle to facilitate gnawing. Domestic lamb is more than suitable for crown roast and with its slightly firmer texture seems to stand up better on the plate than the incredibly supple lamb from Australia and New Zealand. The local lamb is also a good deal.

1h 15m6 servings
Slow Roast Pork Shoulder With Herb Rub
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Slow Roast Pork Shoulder With Herb Rub

12h10 servings
Sardines in Vinegar (Escabeche)
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Sardines in Vinegar (Escabeche)

25mServes 4
Chilled Braised Apricots With Yogurt, Honey And Pistachios
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Chilled Braised Apricots With Yogurt, Honey And Pistachios

30m4 to 6 servings
Creamy Grits With Fontina Fonduta And Mushroom Stew
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Creamy Grits With Fontina Fonduta And Mushroom Stew

1h 30m4 servings
Union Square Cafe's Tuna Club Sandwich
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Union Square Cafe's Tuna Club Sandwich

This update on a workaday sandwich takes time and work, it’s true. But the result, Julia Reed says, is the best old-fashioned tuna salad sandwich you’ve ever had in your life. You’ll need one pound of yellowfin tuna, which you’ll poach with aromatics, cool and then mix with a few chopped peppers, fennel seed, onion and herbs. If you plan ahead, you can make the tuna salad without the herbs, refrigerate it overnight, and add them in before assembling your sandwiches. Layer it on toasted bread with a lemon-pepper aioli, slab bacon and arugula. This is picnic food for the gods.

45m4 servings
Fried Chicken
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Fried Chicken

1h 50m4 servings (with leftovers)
Le Bernardin's Salmon-Caviar Croque-Monsieur
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Le Bernardin's Salmon-Caviar Croque-Monsieur

When the stock market is doing well, people with money to spend go out to spend it — thereby serving as unwitting patrons of the culinary arts. In the late '90s, the chef Eric Ripert said, “Everybody was a bit, I think, crazy and inclined to indulge in excess because of the end of the millennium." His contribution to the madness was this croque-monsieur layered not with ham and béchamel but with something even more indulgent: smoked salmon, Gruyère and caviar on brioche. Make it home, and don't look at the grocery bill. It is in service of luxurious flavor.

10mServes 2 to 4
Rib Roast of Beef
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Rib Roast of Beef

4h4 to 8 servings (about 2 servings per rib)
Turkey or Ham Risotto
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Turkey or Ham Risotto

25m2 servings
Pan-Roasted Duck With Wild Mushrooms
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Pan-Roasted Duck With Wild Mushrooms

Magret is the term used for the large breasts of a Muscovy duck, found at many butcher shops and supermarkets or easily purchased online. Each breast weighs about 12 ounces, enough for 2 portions.They are best served rare or medium-rare, like a beef steak. If using smaller duck breasts, reduce the cooking time accordingly. The deeply flavored sauce is made from dried wild mushrooms and a mixture of cultivated mushrooms sautéed with garlic and parsley finishes the dish. If wild chanterelles or porcini are available, by all means, add them to the mixture, too. Mashed squash or sweet potato would make a nice accompaniment.

1h 30m6 servings
Mealie Meal
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Mealie Meal

15m6 servings
Roast Leg of Lamb With Anchovy, Garlic and Rosemary
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Roast Leg of Lamb With Anchovy, Garlic and Rosemary

2hServes 4
A Chicken in Every Teapot
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A Chicken in Every Teapot

"I heard what people thought about French food," the chef Michel Richard said to Marian Burros in a 1993 interview. "They say it's too rich, it's too heavy, there's too much sauce. When I opened Citrus, immediately I had less butter and less cream. You don't need butter and cream. The Chinese don't use it." For this recipe, chicken is steamed over a broth made from chicken stock and tea.

1h 45m4 servings
Korean Pancakes (Pa Jun)
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Korean Pancakes (Pa Jun)

20m2 to 4 appetizer servings (3 pancakes)
Pumpkin Gratin
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Pumpkin Gratin

1h6 to 8 servings