Nut-Free
1684 recipes found

Morels

Spring Vegetable Stew
This is inspired by a lush Sicilian springtime stew called fritteda that also includes peas and fava beans (and much more olive oil). This one is simpler, but equally sweet and heady because of all the fennel and the spring onions. I like to serve it with bow tie pasta and a little Parmesan as a main dish, or with grains as part of a meal in a bowl. It also makes a delicious side dish with just about anything. The stewed vegetables will keep for about 3 days in the refrigerator, but the dish is best freshly made.

Slow Roasted Duck With Orange-Sherry Sauce
The New Orleans raconteur Pableaux Johnson scored this recipe from Greg Sonnier of Gabrielle restaurant in the Mid-City neighborhood back in 2004, calling it a reflection "of the dual nature of New Orleans cookery." Inspired by the haute cuisine of K-Paul's Louisiana Kitchen, where Mr. Sonnier got his start, it also takes more than a bow toward the city's legendary street food tradition of gravy-soaked po' boys laden with French fries. At the restaurant, Mr. Sonnier served the dish over shoestring potatoes. Home cooks can substitute mock frites or hash browns. Either way, the interplay between the moist meat, luscious sauce and crisp potatoes is nonpareil. (Sam Sifton)

Rhubarb Sherbet

Braised Leeks With Parmesan
My friend Elizabeth tells me that even people who think they don't like leeks like this dish. The leeks are braised in wine and water or stock until soft and golden, then topped with Parmesan and run under a broiler, so you get a crunchy layer on top of soft cooked leeks. One of the tricks here is to discard the outer layers that become papery when you cook them, so that the whole leek will be soft and easy to cut through.

Olive-Oil-Poached Bay Scallops With Chickpeas

Tarragon Sauce

Orange Glaze

Provençal Leg Of Lamb With Potato Gratin

Brother Bandera's Italian Easter Bread

Black Olive Paste

I Trulli's White Anchovy And Orange Salad

Southern Mesclun Salad

Lamb With Tomatoes And Olives

Sunchoke and Apple Salad
In the fall, sunchokes are crunchy and watery, like a water chestnut, or like a pear that’s not sweet. In this salad from executive chef Michael Anthony at New York City’s Gramercy Tavern, a combination of raw and roasted sunchokes are tossed with apples, celery, shallots, pumpkin seeds and mixed greens then dressed with a sweet-tart apple cider vinaigrette.

Fresh Berry-Filled Cones

Baked Apple Cruch

Thai Shrimp And Scallop Chowder

Scallops in Cream Sauce

Bay Scallops Provencal

Squash Sauce

Monkfish With Meat Sauce

Spring Green Risotto
