Nut-Free

1679 recipes found

Moules Marinières
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Jul 19, 1987

Moules Marinières

1h4 servings
Tomato Sauce for Custard Pie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Jul 8, 1987

Tomato Sauce for Custard Pie

30mabout 3 cups
Brie and Artichoke Custard Pie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Jul 8, 1987

Brie and Artichoke Custard Pie

1h 35m8 servings
Lemon Meringue Pie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Jul 5, 1987

Lemon Meringue Pie

This adaptation of Alice Waters’s lemon meringue pie, which came to the Times in a 1987, takes a little time, but your efforts will be rewarded with a spectacular centerpiece dessert: a cloud of toasted meringue atop a pool of buttery and bright lemon curd in a light and flaky crust. If you can’t find Meyer lemons, which aren’t as tangy as regular lemons, and have a spicy, floral note, regular supermarket lemons will make a worthy substitute. This recipe makes an elegant pie with a restrained ratio of lemon curd to meringue, but if you want more of a showstopper — the towering kind you might find in a diner or at a church picnic, for instance — you can double the filling as some of our readers do, and as we did for the photograph above. (Although you certainly could, we did not double the meringue. If you don't, save the leftover egg whites for another use.)

4hOne 9-inch pie
Osso Buco Alla Milanese
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Oct 27, 1985

Osso Buco Alla Milanese

Among hearty stew-like recipes, Italian osso buco ranks as a classic. Meaty veal shanks simmered with white wine and vegetables and served with risotto is to Milan what beef in red wine is to Burgandy. Osso buco means ''bone with a hole.'' The shank bone is hollow, filled with delectable marrow. It is traditional to serve long, slender marrow spoons with this dish to facilitate removing the marrow and enjoying it (cocktail forks are adequate substitutes). Gremolata, a garnish of minced lemon peel, garlic and parsley, is another requirement.

2h 20m6 servings
Creamy Pumpkin-Leek Soup
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Oct 26, 1983

Creamy Pumpkin-Leek Soup

1h 30mServes 4 to 6
Craig Claiborne’s Polenta
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Jun 29, 1983

Craig Claiborne’s Polenta

30m4 to 8 servings
Cucumber Salad With Soy, Ginger and Garlic
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cucumber Salad With Soy, Ginger and Garlic

The trick to any sliced cucumber salad is to slice the cucumbers as thin as you can and to purge them by salting them before making the salad so the dressing doesn’t get watered down by the cucumber juice.

20mServes 4
Chicken Breasts With Lemon
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chicken Breasts With Lemon

In this recipe, which Pierre Franey brought to The Times in 1992 in one of his 60-Minute Gourmet columns, two teaspoons of lemon zest are added to a simple sauce of lemon juice, thyme, garlic and shallots. It is, at once, lively and elegant. To round it out, it needs a sturdy accompaniment. Mr. Franey suggested mashed potatoes with garlic and basil, with just a little olive oil swirled in.

25m4 servings
Poached Chicken Breasts With Tomatillos and Jalapeños
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Poached Chicken Breasts With Tomatillos and Jalapeños

Boneless, skinless chicken breasts can be easy to overcook, going from tender to rubbery in a matter of seconds. Not so here, where the breasts are cooked in chicken stock in a very low oven, which keeps them moist and juicy. Tomatillos, jalapeños and garlic, which are roasted at the same time, turn golden and soft before being chopped into a vibrant, cilantro-laced salsa. Make this on days when you don’t mind having the oven on low for a couple of hours. It may take a while to cook, but most of that time is entirely hands-off.

2h4 servings
Chicken “Piccata” With Chard or Beet Greens
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chicken “Piccata” With Chard or Beet Greens

These pungent, lemony chicken breasts that are among the top 10 dinners in my house. I pound chicken breasts thin, – to about 1/4 inch. This way, you can get a good two servings, if not more, out of each boneless, skinless breast. They take minutes to cook, and you can pound the chicken breasts ahead of time and keep them between sheets of plastic in the refrigerator until you’re ready to make dinner.

20mServes 4
Lemon and Garlic Chicken With Mushrooms
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Lemon and Garlic Chicken With Mushrooms

In this Provençal rendition of pan-cooked chicken breasts, the mushrooms take on an added dimension of flavor as they deglaze the pan with the help of one of their favorite partners, dry white wine.

45mServes 4
Soy-Ginger Chicken With Greens
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Soy-Ginger Chicken With Greens

I serve these spicy pan-cooked pounded chicken breasts over a mound of pungent wild arugula or other salad greens. Some of the salad dressing serves as a marinade for the chicken.

45m4 servings
Poached Chicken Breasts With Parsley-Onion Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Poached Chicken Breasts With Parsley-Onion Salad

Slowly poaching bone-in chicken breasts in a very low oven makes the meat extremely silky, without turning it tough or drying it out. And having the oven on for an extended period allows you to cook other things in the gentle heat. Here, halved cherry tomatoes turn sweet and jamlike. A pan of chicken skin renders and crisps, becoming golden and potato-chip crunchy before getting tossed with a bright parsley-onion salad. If you’d rather skip the chicken skin, you can. This dish is nearly as good without it, though you may want to add some toasted pine nuts or slivered almonds to the parsley salad for texture.

1h 45m4 servings
Original Plum Torte
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Original Plum Torte

The Times published Marian Burros’s recipe for Plum Torte every September from 1983 until 1989, when the editors determined that enough was enough. The recipe was to be printed for the last time that year. “To counter anticipated protests,” Ms. Burros wrote a few years later, “the recipe was printed in larger type than usual with a broken-line border around it to encourage clipping.” It didn’t help. The paper was flooded with angry letters. “The appearance of the recipe, like the torte itself, is bittersweet,” wrote a reader in Tarrytown, N.Y. “Summer is leaving, fall is coming. That's what your annual recipe is all about. Don't be grumpy about it.” We are not! And we pledge that every year, as summer gives way to fall, we will make sure that the recipe is easily available to one and all. The original 1983 recipe called for 1 cup sugar; the 1989 version reduced that to 3/4 cup. We give both options below. Here are five ways to adapt the torte.

1h 15m8 servings
Roasted Broccoli With Tahini Garlic Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roasted Broccoli With Tahini Garlic Sauce

One of my favorite Middle Eastern mezze is deep-fried cauliflower served with tahini garlic sauce. I decided to try the dish with broccoli, but instead of deep-frying the broccoli I roasted it, a method that requires a lot less oil. The buds on the broccoli florets toast to a crispy brown, and the texture of the stalk remains crisp. It goes wonderfully with the classic and irresistible tahini garlic sauce.

30mServes 6
Broccoli Salad With Garlic and Sesame
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Broccoli Salad With Garlic and Sesame

This salad is made from uncooked broccoli tossed with an assertive garlic, sesame, chile and cumin-seed vinaigrette slicked with good extra-virgin olive oil and red wine vinegar. The acid “cooks” the florets a little as ceviche does fish. After an hour, the broccoli softens as if blanched, turning bright emerald, and soaking up all the intense flavors of the dressing. You’ll be making this one again.

1h 10m6 to 8 servings
Tabbouleh
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Tabbouleh

We think of tabbouleh as a bulgur salad with lots of parsley and mint. But real Lebanese tabbouleh is a lemony herb salad with a little bit of fine bulgur, an edible garden that you can scoop up with romaine lettuce heart leaves or simply eat with a fork. This will keep for a day in the refrigerator, though the bright green color will fade because of the lemon juice.

30m6 appetizer spread servings, 4 salad servings
Greens and Garlic Frittata to Go
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Greens and Garlic Frittata to Go

Chop the greens super-fine to achieve the prettiest color. Use whatever looks best in the market (spinach and chard are brightest when it comes to color), or you can use bagged baby spinach. You only need 1/2 cup of chopped greens, but you could use twice that amount.

30mServes 2
Sauerkraut Jeon (Korean Pancakes)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Sauerkraut Jeon (Korean Pancakes)

Jeon are savory Korean vegetable, meat or seafood pancakes bound with the most basic batter: flour, cornstarch and water. Because the mixture is completely unleavened (no baking powder, yeast or even eggs), they run the risk of turning dense and gummy if you overwork the batter. This is good news for the lazy: The less work you put in, the better they come out. They can be made with virtually any meat or vegetable odds and ends, but they’re especially great with that crunchy sauerkraut languishing in the back of your fridge from that cookout you had last year.

30m4 servings
Large White Bean, Tuna and Spinach Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Large White Bean, Tuna and Spinach Salad

You could use canned cannellini beans for this, but I love the size and texture of large white limas. I don’t soak limas because the skins tend to detach and the beans fall apart when you cook them. You want them intact for this, but you also need to make sure to cook them all the way through.

2h4 to 6 servings
French Grated Carrot Salad
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

French Grated Carrot Salad

Want to work more carrots into your diet? Make up a batch of grated carrot salad every week. Standard fare in French cafes and charcuteries, this salad keeps well. If you have it handy, you’ll be eating carrots every day. This classic version is made with a salad oil rather than stronger-tasting olive oil. You have a choice here, as extra-virgin olive oil has health benefits that canola oil may not. Still, choose a mild-tasting olive oil rather than a strong green one. For a twist on this version, try it curried, bolstered with capers, cumin and curry powder.

20m4 to 6 servings
Pineapple and Millet Smoothie
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pineapple and Millet Smoothie

I played around with this smoothie, toying with adding this ingredient (banana) or that (coconut); but in the end what I love about it is the pure flavor of pineapple, softened by the grain that also thickens and bulks up the drink.

10m1 generous serving
Deep Purple Blueberry Smoothie With Black Quinoa
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Deep Purple Blueberry Smoothie With Black Quinoa

My idea for this week’s Recipes for Health was to match grains and fruit by color and make nourishing smoothies. For this one I could have also used any of the black or purple rices on the market, such as Alter Eco’s purple jasmine rice, Lotus Food’s Forbidden Rice or Lundberg Black Japonica. I happened to have a full bag of black quinoa in the pantry, so that’s what I went for and it worked beautifully. You can also use fresh blueberries for this, but when they are not in season, frozen will do fine and will eliminate the need for ice cubes.

10m1 generous serving or 2 small servings