Mushroom
436 recipes found

Ginger Oxtail Stew With Potatoes

Beef-Kidney Stew

Flaky Chicken Hand Pies
Everyone falls for the homey appeal of chicken potpie. This fold-over version made with buttery puff pastry takes the concept up a notch for an elegant lunch or supper. Store bought pastry makes it easy. You can do the cooking in stages, and even freeze the pies (either baked or unbaked) for a future meal. Serve with a green vegetable or leafy salad.

Burrata With Snap Peas and Shiitakes
This recipe plays cleanup in the kitchen, perfect for the depths of summer when counters and crispers are overflowing with the season's gifts. Don't crowd the mushrooms in the pan, which will affect the browning. If burrata isn't available, feel free to substitute the freshest mozzarella you can find.

Mark Strausman's Grilled Mushrooms

Baked Rice With Chicken and Mushrooms
This warming, savory, hearty baked rice casserole was originally meant to be an Indian-style biriyani, but my larder was stocked with Gallic ingredients: mushrooms, thyme, garlic, parsley. I switched gears, heading in a French direction. It’s a great dish for feeding a crowd and also reheats beautifully, so it’s worth making the entire batch. Serve with a crisp green salad, juicy wilted spinach or mustard greens, or all-season frozen peas.

Crostini With Mushrooms

Paupiettes Of Sole With Spinach And Mushroom Stuffing

Mushroom Soba (Buckwheat Noodles) With Four-Mushroom Sauce

Chicken legs stuffed with wild rice and mushrooms

Fennel, Mushroom and Radish Salad

No-Fuss Grits
This recipe comes from a feast by Mark Bittman and Sam Sifton. They traveled to Charleston, S.C. to show you how to create a spring holiday dinner party. The folks at Husk, an excellent restaurant in town, told them to buy Geechie Boy grits, which they picked up at the Piggly Wiggly.

Purslane Salad With Mushrooms, Walnuts and Olives
One of the things I like best about these greens is that they’re good cooked or uncooked. The leaves of dandelions and amaranth are quite tough, so if they are to be used in a salad, they should be cut in very thin ribbons, or chiffonade. Cooking diminishes their bitterness and gives endives a velvety texture that I love. This crunchy salad is about as high in omega-3 fats as a salad can be.

Pork-Braised Artichokes

Chicken Noelle (Chicken breasts with artichokes)

Provençal White Wine Beef Daube
A classic Provençal beef daube, or slow-baked stew, is made with quantities of red wine, like the recipes that Julia Child often made in her house in Provence, La Pitchoune. Patricia Wells, a former New York Times food writer in Paris, also lives part-time in the South of France, and she has adapted the daube for white wine, which plays a more subtle part in flavoring the stew. The large amount of liquid makes a tender braise that can also be served as a sauce for pasta: penne, gnocchi and long noodles like tagliatelle are familiar in the region, which borders Italy on the east.

Beef With Mushrooms and Capers

Sweetbreads Braised In Wild Mushroom Broth

Brown Rice Salad With Mushrooms and Endive
Triticale is a hybrid grain made from wheat and rye, which farmers and health food stores alike had high hopes for in the 1970s. It is a good source of phosphorus and a very good source of magnesium, but apparently the yields were disappointing to farmers and it never really caught on among consumers. I had sort of forgotten about it until I came across it again recently at Bob’s Red Mill. I like its chewy texture and earthy flavor, both very similar to farro or wheatberries. Any hearty, toothsome grain works well in this salad, so I’ve given you a choice.

Braised Celery Root Purée With Mushrooms

Rice With Mushrooms

Mushroom and Daikon Soup

Sauteed Trout With Lime
