Potatoes

1358 recipes found

Potato-Cheddar Soup With Quick-Pickled Jalapeños
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Potato-Cheddar Soup With Quick-Pickled Jalapeños

If cheesy mashed potatoes became a cozy soup, it would be this. It’s rich but not excessive, hearty but not heavy, and spiked with a little chili powder and some garlic to liven it up. The homemade pickled jalapeños give this a bright tang that perks up every creamy bite. Quick and easy to make, the jalapeños are leagues better than anything in a jar, and leftovers are excellent in sandwiches or scrambled into eggs.

1h4 to 6 servings
Potato Nik
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Potato Nik

After living in what must have seemed like every neighborhood in three boroughs, my mother’s parents, in their old-ish age, settled in Astoria, which is where I spent almost all the Thanksgivings of my childhood. Thanksgiving was always (in my memory) gray and blustery, and my grandmother’s kitchen, steamy. She produced, almost solo, the traditionally ridiculous abundance of food, including my favorite, the potato “nik,” a huge latke fried in chicken fat until really brown, and as crisp as perfectly done shoestring fries. I still make this, and so can you.

40m4 to 6 servings
Masoor Dal (Spiced Red Lentils)
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Masoor Dal (Spiced Red Lentils)

What I have come to understand is that how food looks as you prepare it can make as much difference to the cook as it does, on the plate, to the person who gets to eat it. When the skies are drab and life feels a little gray, I am absurdly cheered by the fresh brightness of a vibrantly orange dal, a red lentil stew spiced with turmeric, chili and ginger, and colored with sweet potatoes and tomatoes. Just seeing that mixture in the pan lifts my spirits. It helps that a dal is simple to make: a bit of chopping and the stew all but cooks itself. And it can be made in advance and then reheated, always a bonus. This dal makes a wonderful, exuberant partner to broiled salmon, but I love it without meat, too, when I partner it with my “bright rice.”

45m4 to 6 servings
Spicy Corn and Coconut Soup
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Spicy Corn and Coconut Soup

A good corn soup is creamy and naturally sweet; an even better corn soup is spicy, refreshing and addictive. In this recipe, it’s the combination of shallots, garlic, ginger, chiles and coconut milk, rather than heavy cream or butter, that makes the soup at once cooling and rich. It’s a dinner in a bowl (and a vegan one at that), but it would surely welcome a side of steamed rice or salad of leafy greens. To serve, add garnishes that are any combination of spicy (extra fresh chile or store-bought chile oil), crunchy (toasted coconut, chopped peanuts or cashews, fried shallots) or fresh (torn cilantro, chopped scallions), and it’ll be even more dynamic.

30m4 servings
Sweet and Sassy Sweet Potato Pockets
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Sweet and Sassy Sweet Potato Pockets

This portable recipe was created by Kathy Patalsky, of Los Angeles. Ms. Patalsky came up with the recipe in college to bring to a family feast. “Since I love Thanksgiving, I didn’t want to miss out on any of my favorite dishes,” she said. “So instead of bringing multiple dishes and crowding the already crowded dinner table, I made these little gems. I wanted my entire vegan Thanksgiving meal stuffed inside a puffy pita pocket.”

40m8 servings
French Potato Pancakes
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French Potato Pancakes

When the chef Daniel Rose was growing up, his mother would make potato pancakes the first and the last three nights of Hanukkah. These latkes are inspired by the French classic pommes Darphin, but the addition of onions puts them in a category all their own.

35m6 servings (2 pancakes)
Mashed Potato Latkes With Dill and Shallots
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Mashed Potato Latkes With Dill and Shallots

Latkes from grated potatoes are traditional and crispy. But I like this baked potato version because the flavor of the potatoes shines through, punched up with the pronounced seasoning of dill and parsley.

1h 15m10 latkes
Puréed Roasted Squash and Yams With Citrus
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Puréed Roasted Squash and Yams With Citrus

This aromatic dish is inspired by a recipe in Lynne Rossetto Kasper’s wonderful book “The Splendid Table.” The dish was traditional at Yom Kippur among the Italian Jews of Emilia-Romagna. Ms. Kasper says that in Italy the dish is often served with poached turkey, which says to me that it’s perfect for Thanksgiving.

1h 30m6 to 8 servings
Potato Pancakes With Scallions And Prosciutto
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Potato Pancakes With Scallions And Prosciutto

15mSix to eight servings
Oven-Braised Guinness Beef Stew With Horseradish Cream
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Oven-Braised Guinness Beef Stew With Horseradish Cream

Classic beef stew is good, but this sophisticated beef stew — enriched with beer, cocoa powder and espresso — is really something special. Start by browning the beef and making a quick roux to guarantee a thick, flavorful stew instead of a watery, bland soup, and finish with hit of balsamic vinegar and lemon juice to balance out the rich, round notes. Dried shiitake mushrooms provide another layer of complexity, but if you can’t find them, leave them out. The stew will still be delicious. Top big bowls of it with swirls of tangy horseradish cream. (Here are slow cooker and pressure cooker versions of the recipe.)

3h6 servings
Jane And Michael Stern's Mashed Potatoes
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Jane And Michael Stern's Mashed Potatoes

40mFour to six servings
Spice-Rubbed Beer-Can Chicken with Potatoes and Sweet Peppers
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Spice-Rubbed Beer-Can Chicken with Potatoes and Sweet Peppers

1h 15m4 servings
Grilled Shrimp Skewers With Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
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Grilled Shrimp Skewers With Roasted Red Pepper Sauce

Fresh wild shrimp from the Gulf of Mexico (and the Atlantic coast off the Carolinas and Georgia) are the best option for shrimp lovers. Leave them in the shell, which keeps them juicy, before threading on skewers to grill. These are seasoned only with a little salt, then served with a spicy red pepper sauce that takes cues from the Catalan romesco.

1h4 to 6 servings
Ash-Roasted Potatoes
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Ash-Roasted Potatoes

You don’t need a real recipe for these potatoes, but you do need a charcoal grill because these ash-baked tubers won’t work with gas. The recipe is a throwback to when clans of kids roamed New York City streets in the early 20th century, building fires in abandoned lots and baking potatoes into the ashes for a hot snack. The potatoes turn so sooty black that it can be hard to tell them apart from the coals, especially in the twilight. The timing of when they will be done will vary depending upon the size of your potatoes and the heat of your fire. Stab them with a skewer to see when they are tender within. To eat, carefully break a potato open and scoop out the smoky, fluffy flesh with a spoon, seasoning it with salt and butter to taste. Or go old-school and wrap the potatoes in a newspaper to protect your fingers before breaking them open and biting the flesh directly from the burned shells.

1h 30m6 servings
Pork Stew With Pears and Sweet Potatoes
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Pork Stew With Pears and Sweet Potatoes

It's nice knowing that pears, which we think of almost exclusively for desserts in this country, are often used in savory ways in Eastern European cuisines. In this stew, caraway seeds, allspice and fennel reinforce that heritage, while sweet potatoes add rich, round flavors. Although bone-in ribs seem a bit more flavorful, boneless are also fine here. You can even use a combination of both if that’s what turns out to be in the package you buy at the store. Because the pears can turn mushy overnight, this is the rare stew that’s actually best served the day that it’s made.

2h4 servings
Copper Country Pasties
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Copper Country Pasties

2h6 pasties
Braised Chicken Thighs With Chile, Cinnamon, Cardamom and Coriander
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Braised Chicken Thighs With Chile, Cinnamon, Cardamom and Coriander

If you’re looking to boost flavor, spices are a natural. There are perhaps no cuisines that use spices more deftly than those of India. Borrowing a technique commonly used there, I sweat a trio of aromatic spices before adding the liquid to a braised chicken-thigh dish. The final flavor of the dish, earthy but somehow still delicate, is wholly satisfying.

1h 30m4 to 6 servings
Leek and Potato Soufflé With Ham and Fontina
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Leek and Potato Soufflé With Ham and Fontina

Contain your skepticism: A soufflé made with mashed potatoes doesn’t have to be heavy, as David Tanis revealed in 2012. “The two textures can complement each other, resulting in a dish that tastes light but has an underlying heartiness,” he says. This one gets added flavor from leeks and ham. If you’re new to soufflé-making, this is a good place to start. The potatoes provide a structure that a regular butter and flour roux don’t, he wrote, so it’s less likely to fall.

1h4 to 6 servings
Boiled Red Potatoes
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Boiled Red Potatoes

30m4 servings
Creamy Braised Chanterelles and Potatoes
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Creamy Braised Chanterelles and Potatoes

The simplicity of this dish may make it sound dull, but its flavors are stunningly earthy, rich and deep. It makes a luxurious fall or winter vegetarian main course. The chef who wrote the recipe for this Russian classic, Bonnie Frumkin Morales, says she knows it is tempting to add garnishes like snipped chives or seasonings like black pepper. But the pure flavor of the mushrooms and cream, which saturates the potatoes, is best appreciated alone. You'll need to buy crème fraîche or smetana (not regular sour cream) and heavy cream that hasn't been ultrapasteurized to ensure the sauce stays stable without separating and becoming greasy.

2h4 to 6 main course servings, 8 to 10 appetizer servings
Cotriade Bretonne
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Cotriade Bretonne

45mSix servings
Turnip and Barley Soup
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Turnip and Barley Soup

1h 30m6 servings
Coriander Duck With Sweet-Potato Sauce
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Coriander Duck With Sweet-Potato Sauce

3h4 servings
Basil Mashed Potatoes
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Basil Mashed Potatoes

40m4 servings