Onions & Garlic
1648 recipes found
The 1-Ingredient Upgrade for Silky, Garlicky Hummus
Garlic scapes give this hummus a sweet allium kick.

Russian Dressing
Contrary to its name, Russian dressing was invented in New Hampshire in the early 1900’s and may have gotten its name because the original recipe included a staple of Russian cuisine: caviar. Often used as a dip or a salad dressing, it is perhaps best known as a spread on the iconic Reuben sandwich. Pink in color from a combination of ketchup and mayonnaise, it is frequently mistaken for its sweeter sibling, Thousand Island dressing, but Russian dressing is spicier thanks to the addition of horseradish. This recipe is flexible: Grating the onion releases more of its flavorful juices, but mincing works just fine. Swap the onion for shallot, if you like, or use smoked paprika instead of sweet. For an extra-spicy kick, add a dash of hot sauce.
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The Smoky Grilled Vegetable You’ve Been Missing
Toss garlic scapes with olive oil, salt, and pepper, then char them on a hot grill.

Spaghetti Napolitan
Spaghetti Napolitan should be thought of as a yaki (“fried”) noodle dish more than an Italian-style pasta. This smart, effortlessly delicious version comes from ketchup lover Chiaki Ohara of Davelle, a Japanese café on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Frying the ketchupy noodles and vegetables over high heat, in a generous amount of oil, results in a deeply satisfying sauce, so don’t be afraid of a little fire (or oil, for that matter). This is Japan’s yoshoku (“Western-style”) interpretation of Italian tomato spaghetti, a dish that’s hard to get right, but Ms. Ohara’s Napolitan ratios are quietly precise and genius. If you can relish it, the soft fried egg on top adds so much.

Oregano-Garlic Chicken With Big Croutons
Tender, crispy chicken and big hand-torn chunks of toasty bread are the main elements here for this laid-back sheet-pan dinner. To make sure the chicken is thoroughly flavorful, a quick sauce of warm garlic oil, vinegar and oregano is spooned over. The croutons also become saturated in the sauce, creating a double texture of crunchy and chewy. Golden raisins offer little surprise bursts of sweetness and tang, too. When you’re choosing bread for this, something hearty with an open and airy crumb works well. Try ciabatta, Pugliese, a rustic sourdough loaf or even a baguette. Enjoy the croutons however you like – with your hands, a fork, or straight from the baking sheet. A sprightly salad or roasted zucchini would round this meal out nicely.

Caramelized Carrot and Halloumi Salad
Salty bites of crisp, golden-brown halloumi play well with sweet and tender caramelized carrots and red onion in this warm salad that takes inspiration from fattoush. Here, kale and crunchy toasted pita add enough bulk to ensure this dish is satisfying enough for dinner. It’s all tied together with a simple vinaigrette that’s both earthy and herbaceous, thanks to the blend of herbs, sesame and sumac found in za’atar. If you’d like to make this salad vegan, feel free to skip the cheese.

Slow Cooker Garlic Butter Chicken
The seasoning of this rich garlic and herb braise is inspired by escargot butter, which famously makes everything delicious, and is easy to make with just a few impactful ingredients. A generous dollop of sour cream added before serving brings it all together and makes it feel a little fancy. Top bowls generously with croutons, which lend crunch and soak up the flavorful sauce, or serve with thick slices of crusty bread.
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The Herby, Garlicky Butter Chefs Are Slathering on All Their Steak, Fish, and Vegetables
A flavorful compound butter packed with mild and herbal garlic scapes with parsley, lemon, juice, and salt—perfect for melting on meats and fish and more.

Italian Dressing
Ever-popular Italian dressing has endless commercial versions available, but you probably have everything you need to make it at home in your pantry. Here, earthy herbs, tangy vinegar and sweet honey are blended with the Italian culinary staples of garlic and olive oil, creating a perfectly balanced dressing that is ready to drizzle over a classic “pizza shop” salad of crisp romaine, sliced tomatoes and cucumbers, olives and cubes of provolone, or soak into chunks of almost-stale bread, ripe tomatoes and sliced onions for a perfect panzanella salad. Of course, it can enhance much more than just salad. Use it as a marinade for chicken, drizzle it over roasted vegetables or toss it with pasta salad. Feel free to make your own Italian seasoning mix (see Tip) instead of buying it, and you can easily swap out the red wine vinegar for white wine or balsamic varieties.

Mujadara (Lentils and Rice With Fried Onions)
Comforting, nourishing and budget-friendly, mujadara (which has a variety of spellings) is a humble lentil and rice dish beloved across Levantine cuisines. This version uses rice, but it can also be prepared with bulgur. Either way, deeply browned onions are the star and foundation of the dish, so make sure to cook them until they are a rich golden brown. Be sure to save the cooking water from the lentils, as it provides a flavorful broth to cook the rice. This version of mujadara is spiced with cumin, but feel free to add other spices, such as coriander. The crunchy fried-onion topping is optional, but highly recommended for a joyful party of flavors and textures. Serve mujadara with a side of plain yogurt and a simple green salad, cucumber and tomato salad, fattoush salad or fresh herbs like mint.

Oven Chicken Kebabs
Made with ground chicken (or lamb), these Turkish-inspired kebabs are highly spiced with red pepper, paprika, cumin, sumac and onion. They may also be grilled or broiled. Serve with lavash flatbread or pita and some refreshing vegetable salads.

Chickpea Fatteh (Crispy Pita, Chickpeas and Yogurt)
Every family has its own way of making chickpea fatteh, but the layers of toasted pita, chickpeas and yogurt sauce always deliver a contrast of creamy and crunchy, warm and cool, sharp and earthy. This version, adapted from Sawsan Daana, the Palestinian chef of Matbakhi restaurant in Kuwait City, includes a layer of hummus in addition to the whole chickpeas, as is typical in Amman as well as Jerusalem, where she was born. Lebanese and Syrian versions skip the hummus and lean more heavily on tahini in the yogurt sauce (see Tip). Whichever route you take, this impressive dish is far easier to pull off than it looks, since the steps are straightforward and many ingredients repeat. If you like, you can prep everything but the toppings one or two days in advance and assemble when ready to serve.

Loose Meat Sandwich
The sandwich of choice around Sioux City, Iowa is the loose meat sandwich — think Sloppy Joes without the tomato-based sauce. Here, ground beef and onions are cooked into intensely flavorful crumbles with a few seasonings, then piled high on a hamburger bun with dill pickles and yellow mustard. Sometimes known as a Maid-Rite (named after the restaurant chain that popularized it), a “tavern” or a “canteen,” this is the nostalgic sandwich of a million Iowan childhoods. The recipe easily satisfies a crowd: Just make a double batch of the beef filling, then scoop onto buns until you run out.

Mini Kabob’s Chicken Lule Cutlets
Juicy, buttery and well-seasoned, the ground-chicken lule cutlets that the Armenian American chef Armen Martirosyan serves at Mini Kabob in Glendale, California are comforting, savory and incredibly versatile. After culinary school, Mr. Martirosyan learned to make chicken lule from his father at his family’s 290-square-foot restaurant. The chicken mixture is simple, with just five ingredients; fragrant white pepper adds an earthy, grassy flavor and the generous amount of onion helps the patties stay moist and light. Sometimes Mr. Martirosyan grills the lule kebab on wide metal skewers, but here they’re hand-formed into patties and seared in butter until golden brown and tender. Serve them with roasted tomatoes, hummus, rice or parsley and sumac-marinated onions.

Ginger-Scallion Stir-Fried Shrimp
Supremely quick and easy, this is a delightful anytime recipe that enhances the flavor of shrimp with three dynamic ingredients: garlic, ginger and scallions. The shrimp gets coated with cornstarch before cooking, which keeps the shrimp tender and adds body to the pan sauce. Whipped together with little more than tomato paste and water, the pan sauce soaks up the flavors of the scallions, ginger and garlic. This dish is best enjoyed with rice or noodles.

Garlic Chicken and Broccoli with Lemon
Golden seared chicken, florets of broccoli and a quick pan sauce made of garlic, anchovy and lemon, create a weeknight meal that evokes the flavors of Caesar salad. Parmesan is grated over everything, adding richness. Serve this with garlic bread or torn croutons to add crunch and help soak up the sauce. If you’d like to double this recipe, cooking the broccoli separately from the chicken is the key to success.

Hoisin Garlic Noodles
Fans of garlic noodles and soy sauce noodles rejoice: Here is a new, weeknight-friendly noodle dish for your repertoire. A staple Cantonese ingredient, thick and fragrant hoisin sauce is often used as a glaze for meat, but also serves as a robust, sweet and salty seasoning for these noodles. The garlic is bloomed briefly in oil, which tames its pungency and unlocks a rich, nutty flavor. Allow the noodles to cook undisturbed for a few minutes to crisp underneath, adding texture and a hint of smokiness. This recipe calls for dried wheat or egg noodles, but if you don’t have Asian-style noodles on hand, you could substitute with spaghetti or linguine. Bulk up the noodles with tofu, eggs or whatever vegetables you have on hand; these noodles welcome toppings.

Peppery Beef and Shishito Stir-Fry
This stir-fry is doubly peppery, thanks to a combination of shishito peppers and plenty of coarsely ground black pepper. Though most of the shishitos are mild, the occasional one packs a punch, adding a delightful unpredictability to any meal. The peppers are fried on high heat until they blister, bringing smoky depth and texture. Soy sauce and toasted sesame oil make a fine (and quick!) marinade for steak strips that are seared in the same wok. Ginger and garlic enhance an umami-rich sauce that makes the steak and peppers shine. Serve with white rice for a formidable weeknight meal in under 30 minutes.

Greek Yogurt-Marinated Salmon
This weeknight-friendly recipe leans on Greek yogurt for a fish marinade that not only adds flavor, but also makes for salmon that’s even more tender than usual. The yogurt works on the salmon slowly, with less risk of “cooking” (or denaturing) the fish that citrus- or vinegar-based marinades pose, and acts as a protective crust, sealing in moisture as the salmon bakes. The marinade in this recipe calls for mostly pantry and fridge staples, along with grated fresh ginger and garlic, but feel free to use the yogurt as a starting point and add your own favorite spices and seasonings.

Ina Garten’s Perfect Roast Chicken
This recipe, from my first book “The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook” (Clarkson Potter, 1999), is my husband’s favorite Friday night dinner ... It’s a tradition with us. He has to drive 3½ hours to get home every weekend, and there’s nothing like the smell of a fresh roast chicken to make him feel that the trip was worth it. Of course, I would never tell him that it is also the world’s easiest dinner. I love to get the chickens at the Iaconos’ farm in East Hampton.

Honey-Garlic Salmon With Grapefruit
A flurry of chopped fresh parsley, lemon zest and garlic, gremolata is an Italian condiment that can brighten luxuriously meaty dishes like osso buco, or just about anything else that skews rich, including buttery roasted salmon fillets. This creative take on the classic garnish swaps the lemon with grapefruit, using both zest and fruit. Add the optional mint to the equation for additional brightness. Not one bit of the citrus is wasted: The juice is reduced and combined with honey and garlic to make a sweet glaze for the fish that offsets the bitter notes of the parsley and fruit.

Haleem (Spiced Beef, Lentil and Barley Stew)
Heavily spiced with peppercorns, fresh ginger, cumin and garam masala, this slow-cooked stew is rich with meltingly tender beef and thickened with tender, broken-down dal and barley. It’s typically prepared in big pots to feed a crowd for special occasions like Eid in Muslim communities across India and Pakistan. While haleem is traditionally slow-simmered on the stove for a few hours (see Tip for the stovetop method), this version, made in an Instant Pot, achieves a similar result in just over an hour. Briefly pulsing the stew in a food processor or using an immersion blender during the final moments of cooking is the easiest way to achieve the stew’s signature silky texture, but vigorous whisking will also do the trick. Serve with roti, naan or pita.

French Onion White Bean Soup
French onion soup gets a hearty makeover in this vegetarian recipe thanks to the addition of creamy white beans. While the classic version usually involves a long and slow caramelization of onions, this recipe uses a few simple techniques to shorten the cook time without sacrificing flavor. The onions are cooked with the lid on, which traps the heat, encouraging the onions to cook faster and concentrating all the flavors. (Do make sure to use a pot that is wide and large; the onions will steam rather than caramelize if overcrowded.) While this recipe is vegetarian and alcohol-free, it is no less rich than the original; the pan gets deglazed with soy sauce (or tamari) and balsamic vinegar, which lifts off all the sweet, charred flavors. No white beans? Substitute with chickpeas or lentils. Taking a cue from the original, the soup is crowned with Gruyère croutons — and, veering from tradition, accented by mustard — to bring a big textural finish.

Chicken, Leek and Potato Soup
Hearty and almost stew-like, this comforting soup is filled with potatoes and tender leeks (including the green parts) and gets a jolt of freshness from lemon and dill. For a zesty kick, stir in some finely grated garlic at the end, which preserves its bright flavor. Don’t skip the sour cream — its dairy tang adds an essential richness. A fresh crusty baguette or some garlic bread is all you might need to complete the meal.