Main Course
8665 recipes found

Cauliflower Cheese
Cauliflower cheese is classic British comfort food. In its simplest form, the vegetable is cloaked with white sauce (béchamel) and Cheddar, then baked until bubbly. It may be served as a side dish but is often the main course for a frugal lunch or supper.

Poke Bowl
A vibrant mix of sushi-grade fish, sticky rice, crunchy vegetables and creamy avocado drizzled with spicy sriracha mayo, a poke bowl is just as much fun to look at as it is to eat. Poke, which roughly translates “to cut crosswise into pieces” in Hawaiian, was born out of a no-waste scenario. While the exact timeframe is uncertain, Polynesians inhabiting what is now the Hawaiian Islands chopped leftover cuts of their daily catch into bite-sized pieces and seasoned them with salt and other ingredients. In the late 1800s, Japanese immigrants added soy sauce and rice to the dish. Eventually, poke made its way to the mainland and evolved into a customizable dish: The toppings listed here are just suggestions, so feel free to get as creative as you like, just make sure there is a balance of flavors and textures. Fresh fish is the star and should be sushi-grade and marinated for at least 1 hour. For a vegetarian version, try marinating cubed, firm avocado, and bulk up on the other ingredients. In the time that it takes to marinate, you can prepare the rice, or make use of leftover rice (you’ll need about 4 cups cooked). Don’t skip the spicy mayo to bring it all together.

Cheesy Frittata
Random leftovers or wilted vegetables in your fridge won’t go to waste when you use this easy frittata formula. First, whisk eggs with salt and allow them to sit while you prepare your mix-ins. This gives the salt time to uncoil some of those egg proteins so they cook up tender and creamy. Next, sauté or warm through any quick-cooking or cooked ingredients, like tender vegetables, cooked grains or shredded rotisserie chicken. Then stir in the beaten eggs and cook into large curds. Top everything with cheese and quickly broil to set the top and melt the cheese. Get creative with the ingredient combos: Try cooking the frittata in bacon fat, filling it with leftover French fries and topping with Cheddar. Stir the eggs into a mix of wilted herbs and spinach, and top with feta for a spanakopita feel. The possibilities are endless.

Spatchcock Roast Chicken
For an exceptionally tender bird that roasts in a fraction of the time of a whole one, consider spatchcocking and brining your chicken. All you need to spatchcock a chicken is a set of sturdy kitchen shears. By snipping along the sides of the backbone, you can remove it, open up your bird and press it flat. A flat chicken allows the legs to get more direct heat for better browning and quicker cooking. If you have time, season the chicken with salt and pepper and chill it in the fridge, uncovered, overnight, a step called dry brining. This gives the salt time to dissolve and be drawn into the meat, resulting in juicy, well-seasoned meat as well as crisp, rendered skin. Roasting on a bed of aromatics infuses the chicken with flavor. Use whatever you’ve got on hand, from sliced onions or lemons to herbs like rosemary or thyme. Setup is key to avoiding cross-contamination, so before handling your raw chicken, gather everything you will need.

Tangy Romaine Salad With Habanero-Avocado Dressing
Tender lettuce, juicy sweet oranges, pungent radishes and crunchy cucumbers get a lush treatment with this creamy, tangy, rich, addictingly spicy dressing that leaves a luxuriously rich and full mouthfeel after each bite. The habanero becomes sweeter and its flavors more bold as it roasts, imparting zesty, peppy flavor, feisty bite and a hint of rustic smoke to the creamy avocado dressing. This dressing works well on any green salad — but is so good you might even want to pour it onto a bowl and eat with a spoon.

Habanero Chicken and Broccoli
In this bright, tangy sheet-pan dish, the chicken gets a quick first roast covered in a light oregano and garlic marinade. That quick warmup is followed by a stellar run: The chicken is flipped, broccoli florets get tucked all around and a sweet citrus sauce with the slightest habanero kick drenches the mix. The sauce adds flavor and moisture to the chicken as it roasts and browns, and soaks the broccoli, which chars and tenderizes. Although this can be a complete meal on its own, the ample sauce is so flavorful that you may find yourself craving for something else to soak in it. Rice is the perfect cheerleader to round up the race. The habanero’s heat is tamed by citrus, allowing its zesty and flowery flavors to shine.

Roasted Salmon With Dill and Cucumber Salad
Fish can be dry-brined relatively quickly compared to chicken and other proteins, and the benefits are just as magical: The dry-brining process extends shelf life, aids in crisping the skin, prevents overcooking and firms up the flesh. To do it, heavily salt your fish for at least 15 minutes and up to 2 hours (any longer and the fish will cure), then rinse and pat it dry. You can cook it right away, or store it in the coolest part of your fridge, wrapped in paper towels and placed in a zip-top bag, preferably on ice, for up to 3 days.

Buttery Steak and Potatoes
In professional kitchens, a good line cook can insert a cake tester into a steak, feel it on their lips and know the doneness from its warmth — but this expertise takes time to master. The poke test, in which you compare the firmness of a steak to that of your clenched fist, doesn’t work consistently across various cuts and types of meat. How marbled your steak is, whether it’s conventionally raised, grass-fed or grain-finished, all affect the meat’s final texture. For a perfectly cooked steak every time, your best bet is to use a thermometer. A little bit of tech, combined with frequent flipping, a cast-iron skillet and a final butter baste, will guarantee a steak with a deep mahogany crust on the outside and evenly cooked, ideal doneness on the inside. While the steak rests, toss boiled potatoes in the brown butter drippings for a satisfying and simple side.

Salmon Patties
Pan-seared and flavored with smoked paprika, mustard, lemon juice and scallions, these simple patties transform canned salmon into a quick, delicious and economical dinner. Any variety of salmon, such as sockeye or pink, will work here, but be sure to choose one that’s labeled boneless and skinless. Serve them on their own, or with homemade tartar sauce on the side. Wrap leftover patties in foil and freeze for up to 1 month. To reheat, unwrap and place on a sheet pan, then bake at 350 degrees until heated through, about 15 minutes.

Spaghetti Stir-Fry With Chicken
This is nowhere near a traditional Chinese stir-fry or Italian spaghetti dish. Instead, it’s a recipe my amu (the Bengali term for mother) made by combining staples from her pantry and fridge to reflect the flavors of our favorite takeout without the need for specific noodles or a wok. By using frozen mixed vegetables, there’s only minimal prep and knife work required. The chicken, aromatics and vegetables cook while the pasta boils, so it all comes together quickly. Serve it just out of the pot for a hot meal, or eat it cold the next day, straight out of the fridge.

Sweet Chile Grain Bowl With Tofu
You can use any kind of cooked grain as the base of this colorful, deeply flavored tofu and cabbage bowl. The grains, vegetables and tofu add texture, heft and protein, but the real star is the pungent sauce, a mix of chile crisp, garlic and soy sauce sweetened with ketchup. Brushed onto the tofu and cabbage before roasting, the sauce caramelizes and mellows. Drizzled on top of the bowl right at the end, it stays bright and snappy. Fresh cherry tomatoes tossed with more chile crisp make a juicy, spicy garnish, but you can leave them out if you don’t have any on hand.

Salt-Baked Fish
Roasting a whole fish in a salt crust is an age-old technique. The salt coating seals in the moisture and steams the fish in its own juices, resulting in especially tender, richly flavored flesh. Keeping the skin on the fish prevents it from absorbing too much salt, so don’t try this method with fillets or you risk oversalting. You can serve this simply, as is, or with a sauce (hollandaise, salsa verde, pesto, brown butter and lemon, sesame-soy). And feel free to swap out the aromatics inside the cavity, using other herbs, sliced garlic, onion, ginger, chiles or lemongrass.

Okinawan Soba
Though soba usually refers to buckwheat noodles, Okinawan soba uses wheat noodles that more closely resemble ramen. The chef Steven Pursley, whose family comes from the island prefecture off the Southern coast of mainland Japan, makes his own noodles from scratch. You can use store-bought fresh ramen noodles or another thicker Asian egg noodle for this soup, which gets its flavor from a delicate pork and bonito broth. You can find the noodles, kombu, sake, mirin, bonito, fish cake and red pickled ginger at Japanese markets or well-stocked Asian grocery stores.

Ozoni (New Year Mochi Soup)
Typically consumed just once a year on New Year's Day, this brothy soup is comforting and nourishing. It’s also said to bring good luck and good fortune to those who eat it. Ozoni is highly customizable, but it must always contain pieces of chewy mochi. The rice cakes are traditionally pounded by hand, but are now sold already prepared and are easy to find in Japanese markets around the New Year. This Japanese American version from the chef Chris Ono includes pork belly that simmers in a mix of dashi, soy sauce, sake and ginger until tender. To balance that richness, he serves this soup with lots of mizuna leaves, which can easily be substituted with spinach. For those who believe pork is unlucky at New Year's, it can easily be left out or substituted with chicken.

Aloo Gobi
Wonderfully fragrant and loaded with flavor thanks to garam masala, coriander and ground cumin as well as the mild heat of Kashmiri red chiles, this South Asian potato and cauliflower curry can be served as a vegetarian main or side dish. Preparation of aloo gobi (its name means “potatoes cauliflower”) can vary, but the one constant is that the vegetables must be cooked until tender but not falling apart. Some recipes call for deep-frying the vegetables first, while others roast or boil them; here, they’re partially sautéed, then finished by steaming, so everything is done in one pan. Tomatoes aren’t always typical in aloo gobi, but they add extra moisture and acidity to the dish. This version skews toward the drier side, so add just enough water to help the vegetables finish steaming. For a little tang, sprinkle on some amchur (dried mango powder), or drizzle with lemon juice. Serve aloo gobi with roti, or basmati rice and naan.

Fresh Spring Rolls
Vietnamese-style spring rolls (also known as gỏi cuốn, rice paper rolls, salad rolls and summer rolls) are refreshing, light and the ideal vehicle for crunchy vegetables, fragrant herbs and simple proteins. Made by moistening, filling and rolling rice paper wrappers, they do take some time and finesse, but they’re also quite adaptable. Switch out the shrimp for tofu, chicken, pork, fish or mushrooms, and use any soft, thin, bite-sized vegetables, such as bean sprouts, jicama and avocado, but keep the herbs for their freshness. These fresh spring rolls are best eaten right away as a meal or cut in half for an appetizer. Serve with a creamy peanut sauce or spicy nước chấm for dipping.

Shrimp Pasta
Consider this the shrimp version of vongole rosso, the classic Italian dish of clams tossed with pasta, tomatoes, garlic and white wine. Swapping the shellfish makes for an easy weeknight dinner. The shrimp’s briny sweetness is the star here, and cherry or grape tomatoes add a burst of acidity as well as a pop of color. Any long pasta shape will work well — just be sure to cook the noodles to al dente to give the dish great texture. Serve with the rest of the white wine and a simple green salad.

Açaí Bowl
The star of this refreshing and vibrant bowl is the açaí berry, a small, round fruit native to the Amazon rainforest. When picked from the palm on which it grows, the fruit is bitter with hints of chocolate, and slightly tangy; by the time the berries reach supermarkets (açaí is widely available nowadays), they have been pitted and turned into a frozen purée. Simply thaw the packets for a couple minutes and combine with milk and a handful of other frozen fruits in a high-powered blender for a quick breakfast or dessert. Be mindful not to thin it out too much — the consistency should be thicker than a smoothie so you can eat it with a spoon. Top açaí bowls as you like, with a variety of fruits, nuts, granola and honey.

Cola-Braised Beef With Chile-Lime Onions
Braising tough cuts in cola tenderizes the meat, but perhaps better yet, the soda reduces into a caramelly, citrusy sauce. Here, cola’s makeup is accentuated by coriander seeds and ginger and grows savory with tomato paste, garlic and soy sauce. Because this recipe’s flavors are reminiscent of BBQ pulled pork, cochinita pibil and cola chicken, it’s equally fitting over rice or stuffed into burger buns or tortillas. However you enjoy the wobbly and rich meat, generously garnish with spicy onions, cilantro and lime for fresh pops of brightness. To make ahead, cool in the liquid and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Reheat covered in a low-temperature oven.

Pancit
Often served for special occasions like Noche Buena or birthdays, pancit is a Filipino dish of stir-fried noodles, meat and vegetables coated in a savory-sweet sauce. Pancit, which means “noodles”, has many delicious variations. This one, made with tender vermicelli rice noodles, carrots, cabbage, and chicken or pork, is known specifically as pancit bihon. Feel free to add other vegetables like green beans or snow peas. You can top the noodles with lechon kawali, crispy and juicy fried pork belly, and use the stock from that dish instead of chicken stock. (Just be sure to adjust the salt as necessary.) Pancit can be prepared in large batches, but however it’s served, include wedges of calamansi, if available. It’s a citrus fruit native to the Philippines that will brighten up the entire dish.

Crispy Potato and Sour Cream Tart
This elegant tart riffs on the classic party combo of sour cream, caviar and potatoes. Here, sliced cooked potatoes are tossed with sour cream, Parmesan and chives, then spread onto a puff pastry crust. After baking, the top of the tart is strewn with crumbled potato chips for crunch and an optional layer of some kind of caviar for a salty pop (tobiko, salmon or trout roe work nicely). Cut into small pieces to serve as an hors d’oeuvre or larger pieces for the centerpiece of a festive brunch.

Paprika-Roasted Chickens and Potatoes
Roasting two chickens on one sheet pan with a heap of potatoes low-and-slow has perks both in flavor and practicality — plus, you’ll welcome guests to an amazing-smelling house. The rotisserie-like chicken will be so tender, carving is a cinch. It will be juicy from lemons stuffed in the cavity, a trick from Marcella Hazan. The brittle skin will be fiery from smoked paprika, cayenne and black pepper. And as a bonus, the lemon and chicken juices mingle to create a devilishly spiced, tangy sauce for the chicken and buttery potatoes. All it needs is a Caesar salad.

Whole Roasted Squash With Tomato-Ginger Chickpeas
With creamy squash, sticky chickpeas and tangy yogurt, this vegetarian sheet-pan feast easily serves a crowd. The method here doesn’t bother with cutting rock-hard raw winter squash. Instead, roast them whole until you can rip them apart into wedges. Meanwhile, chickpeas, tomatoes, olive oil and a warming combination of cinnamon, ginger and marjoram concentrate until the chickpeas are buttery-soft and the tomatoes caramelized. Accompany with yogurt and perhaps salad greens dressed with lemon or lime juice. To make ahead, refrigerate the cooked squash pieces, chickpeas and yogurt separately for up to 4 days; reheat the squash and chickpeas covered in a low-temperature oven or serve at room temperature. To make vegan, add lemon or lime juice to non-dairy yogurt until tangy.

Porcupine Meatballs
This cleverly named dish, which gets its moniker from the spiky grains of rice that protrude from the meatballs, became popular during the Great Depression, when rice was often added to expensive ground meat as a way to “stretch” it. It’s still a useful budget tip — or an easy way to eat a little less meat — and you might find you like these lighter meatballs even better than the traditional sort. Some recipes call for uncooked rice, but using cooked rice ensures that you won’t end up with crunchy grains in an otherwise tender meatball. This recipe uses ground beef, but feel free to swap in ground turkey, pork or chicken. Like most tomato sauce-based dishes, these meatballs freeze well: Cool completely, then transfer to an airtight container and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge and reheat on the stovetop, covered, over medium-low heat. Serve the meatballs with a simply cooked green vegetable, such as sautéed spinach or steamed broccoli.