Milk & Cream
3644 recipes found

Brown Rice Piirakka

White Chocolate Mousse

Pecan Waffles
One of the pleasures of waffle-making is, and always has been, the limitless flavors with which the waffles may be made and served: a blend of flours (such as whole-wheat and regular flour), cornmeal, various cheeses, nuts (such as pecans or hazelnuts), and so on.

Mini-Blini

My Favorite Bread Stuffing

Sour Cream Ice Cream With Brown Sugar Strawberry Swirl
Wait to make this until good strawberries are available, because this fool-proof method lets their flavor and texture really shine through. Tangy from the sour cream, this is imbued with a caramel-tinged brown sugar sauce, and the ice cream itself has a soft but not runny texture. Think Mister Softee meets artisanal.

Gaufres (French waffles)

Lorraine Bodger's Lemon Shortbread

Cheese Waffles
One of the pleasures of waffle-making is, and always has been, the limitless flavors with which the waffles may be made and served: a blend of flours (such as whole-wheat and regular flour), cornmeal, various cheeses, nuts (such as pecans or hazelnuts), and so on.

Braised Duck With Apples, Calvados and Sour Cream

Oysters Rockefeller Deconstructed

Yogurt or Buttermilk Soup With Wheat Berries
This is the kind of meal I could eat every day for lunch and never tire of. Cold summer soups welcome the addition of chewy whole grains. On a hot day in early summer, a soup like this one is both refreshing and substantial.

Creolaise Sauce
What if you seasoned hollandaise with a spicy Creole mustard? You’d get this sauce, which Marion Burros brought to The Times in 1983, part of a piece on Cajun cooking. In it, she highlighted Chez Marcelle in Broussard, where Marcelle Bienvenu served this particular sauce alongside stuffed crabs, one of the restaurant’s specialties. But the sauce can stand on its own, as a stand-in for regular hollandaise. Pair it with eggs, or asparagus, for a bit more kick than the original.

Caramel Pots De Crème
All the textbooks say the same thing: cooking granulated sugar until it turns into caramel involves complex chemistry. And I'm sure they are right. But I'm just as sure that what turns sugar into caramel is magic. Not only is caramel simple, but it is also versatile. Caramelized sugar mixed with butter and cream makes candies soft as taffy or hard as lollipops; thinned with water, it makes a glaze; thinned with cream, it makes a sauce; added to chocolate, it provides complexity; and added to custards, it can provide all the flavor needed for a spoon dessert. This luscious, golden pudding is a perfect example.

Rye Tarte Tatin
Rye flour adds an earthy flavor and soft, cakey texture to this otherwise classic tarte Tatin, which is topped with glossy, nearly candied apples cloaked in caramel. A tangy yogurt sorbet offsets the sweetness, but crème fraîche, a dollop of sour cream or a spoonful of plain Greek yogurt would also work nicely as an accompaniment. This recipe is adapted from the chef Moko Hirayama, who serves it at Mokonuts, the Paris restaurant and cafe she owns with her husband, the chef Omar Koreitem.

Swiss Easter Rice Tart
This is a custard tart, with rice, lemon and almonds in the filling, which is served only at Easter in Switzerland. “It was called gâteau de Pâques and I remember it very well,” said Gray Kunz, the chef who was born in Singapore but grew up in Geneva and Bern. “There would be a bunny in icing sugar stenciled on top.” Nick Malgieri, the baking teacher and author, based this somewhat lighter recipe on several he found in Switzerland.

Alex Patout's Eggplant Dressing

Savory Cold Mango Soup

Chez Marcelle's Cajun Redfish Roulades Stuffed With Crayfish

Deep-Fried Spring Onions
This dish is inspired by something similar served at Chez Panisse in Berkeley. It works as a side, of course, but also as an hors d'oeuvre served with drinks. More spring recipes.

Soft-Shell Crabs With Curry Butter
Fans of soft-shell crab look forward to the season — late spring and early summer — with feverish anticipation. The entire delicious crab is edible and may be prepared in many ways; deep-fried, grilled or pan-cooked. Here they are sautéed in a spicy curry butter, which complements the crabs’ rich flavor. (The recipe makes more butter than is needed for this dish, but is wonderful to have on hand. Use extra for cooking vegetables or eggs.) Serve 1 large or 2 small soft-shell crabs per person.

Green Garlic and Butter Clams

Black Pepper Ice Cream
