Milk & Cream

3644 recipes found

Blueberries and Cream
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Blueberries and Cream

Nigella Lawson called this "the ultimate in a no-cook dessert": nothing more than Greek or whole-milk yogurt and heavy cream combined in a bowl and given a thick sprinkled covering of soft brown sugar, light or dark as you wish. It's a dish her grandmother made, calling it Barbados cream (presumably because the sugar she used came from Barbados). After combining the yogurt, cream and sugar, you wrap the bowl in plastic and put it in the fridge for 12 to 24 hours to let the sugar turn into a dark bronze liquid, slowly seeping into the cream and yogurt. It tastes like a light, uncrunched crème brûlée. When you are ready to eat it, take the cream-yogurt mixture to the table with another bowl filled with blueberries. And then sit down and feel quietly pleased with yourself: you have made a lovely summer dessert and have not so much as broken a sweat.

5m4 servings
Brown-Butter Vinaigrette
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Brown-Butter Vinaigrette

10mMakes 1 cup
Whole Wheat Irish Soda Bread With Bulgur
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Whole Wheat Irish Soda Bread With Bulgur

If you have ever been to Ireland you have tasted soda bread, a moist, easy to make bread that is rich and nutty tasting when made with whole wheat flour. It is a very quick and easy bread to make as long as you are willing to get your hands sticky. When you pull the bread from the oven wrap it loosely in a kitchen towel and allow to cool. This softens the crust and makes it easier to cut.

1h 30m1 9-inch loaf (about 16 generous slices)
Charlotte Russe
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Charlotte Russe

30m8 to 10 servings
Tartine au Sucre
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Tartine au Sucre

Tartine au sucre is an exquisitely simple rustic Québécois dessert consisting of thick slices of white bread topped with maple sugar and heavy cream.

10m4 servings
Almond Granita
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Almond Granita

3hServes 8
Egg Noodles With Cheese
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Egg Noodles With Cheese

10m4 servings
Lemon Caramel Pots de Crème
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Lemon Caramel Pots de Crème

1h 15m6 servings
Peanut Butter and Pickle Sandwich
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Peanut Butter and Pickle Sandwich

This sandwich does not necessarily need a recipe, given its simplicity. But it’s an unlikely pairing, is peanut butter and pickle, and sometimes that is what a recipe is for -- to prod you in a direction that you never considered. Dwight Garner, a book critic for The Times, makes a strong case for this, his favorite sandwich, calling it “a thrifty and unacknowledged American classic.” The vinegary snap of the pickles tempers the unctuousness of the peanut butter, and it’s an unusual pantry sandwich for when luncheon meats leave you cold.

1m1 sandwich
Grappa Mascarpone Cream
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Grappa Mascarpone Cream

10m8 servings
Classic Banana Split
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Classic Banana Split

The key to a great banana split is a combination of textures and temperatures. There’s the velvety cold ice cream, the pleasingly sticky hot fudge and the crunchy wet walnuts (here, made with maple syrup and honey), all nestled in a sliced ripe banana and topped with whipped cream. You can use any ice cream flavors you like: classics like chocolate, vanilla or strawberry, or get creative with your favorite varieties — maybe even a scoop or two of fruity sorbet. Naturally, banana splits are meant to be split between two (or three) people, so find some friends to share the sweetness.

30m4 to 6 servings
Oeufs A La Neige Au Chocolat (Floating Island With Chocolate)
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Oeufs A La Neige Au Chocolat (Floating Island With Chocolate)

25m4 servings
Pie Pastry For A Nine- Or 10-Inch Shell
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Pie Pastry For A Nine- Or 10-Inch Shell

20mOne pie shell
Grilled Trout With Cucumber-Tomato Relish
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Grilled Trout With Cucumber-Tomato Relish

25m4 servings
Spiced Lamb Skewers With Lemony Onions
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Spiced Lamb Skewers With Lemony Onions

This is the type of scalable recipe that is ideal for feeding large groups of people in a short period of time. More snack than a meal, the idea is to build a table of these lightly spiced, grilled skewers (if you don't like lamb, then pork, beef or chicken all work) and fill out the rest of your table with store-bought ingredients like pickles, olives, yogurt and flatbread for sopping it all up. 

25m4 to 6 servings
Justine's Pineapple-Mint Ice Cream
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Justine's Pineapple-Mint Ice Cream

35m10 to 12 servings (about 3 quarts)
Adobo-Fried Chicken
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Adobo-Fried Chicken

This chicken is simmered in an adobo broth of vinegar, bay leaves, sugar and soy sauce for 15 minutes, giving the meat a strong foundation in the Philippines before it is dunked in buttermilk, then breaded and fried. Make the dipping sauce and refrigerate it before you simmer the meat, so you can dig in as soon as the fried chicken has drained and cooled. A well-seasoned cast-iron pan and a splatter screen will help to keep your chicken crispy and your stovetop clean.

1h 20m6 to 8 servings
Pastry
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Pastry

10mabout 3/4 pound
The Dough
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The Dough

2h
Tomato Cobbler With Ricotta Biscuits
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Tomato Cobbler With Ricotta Biscuits

Nicole Rucker, the chef at Fiona in Los Angeles, makes biscuits with a particularly tender, cakelike crumb. Her secret: ricotta. Strain the cheese well to get rid of excess moisture, and don’t be afraid to dust the dough with flour as you work, to keep it from getting oversaturated and sticky. The biscuits, baked atop a mix of tomatoes seasoned with sugar and vinegar, rise tall, with soft insides and crunchy, golden crusts. The dish lies somewhere between a savory course and sweet one, and you can serve it either way.

2h10 servings
Onion Tart
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Onion Tart

The chef André Soltner served this classic warm onion tart almost every day for 43 years at Lutèce, his world-famous restaurant in New York City. It was for a whole generation the pinnacle of elegant French cuisine in the United States, and yet the tart is straightforward and uncomplicated, rustic and refined all at once. Let the onions slowly caramelize — don’t hasten the cooking by jacking up the heat — and you will be rewarded with a haunting savory-sweet tart in the end that is still irresistible decades later, the very definition of an enduring classic.

1h 45m6 servings
Peanut Butter Balls
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Peanut Butter Balls

Depending on where you live, these chocolate and peanut-butter confections are known as either peanut butter balls or buckeyes. In the Midwest, they are known as buckeyes because they look like the nut of a buckeye tree, thanks to an exposed circle of peanut butter that's left after they're dipped in chocolate. Be sure to start with a good-quality peanut butter, and don’t skimp on the salt. Those small touches carry a lot of impact.

25mAbout 30 pieces
Shortcake And More
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Shortcake And More

50m4 servings
Lobster Stew
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Lobster Stew

4 servings