Side Dish

4106 recipes found

Spicy Red Pepper Cranberry Relish
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Spicy Red Pepper Cranberry Relish

A kicky condiment, usually made with cranberries, can offset the neutral (read: bland) yet rich nature of the Thanksgiving meal. This hot red-pepper cranberry relish with jalapeños and cayenne fits the bill. You can keep the seasoning somewhat tame, or ramp up the heat to taste. It will keep for 2 weeks or so; make it in advance, as soon as cranberries are available, and have it on hand in the fridge through the holiday season.

30mAbout 2 cups
Basil Mayonnaise
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Basil Mayonnaise

20mabout 1 cup
Anne Rosenzweig's Winter Kimchi
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Anne Rosenzweig's Winter Kimchi

at least 20 servings
Oven Fried Sweets
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Oven Fried Sweets

40m4 servings
Strawberries With Balsamic Vinegar
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Strawberries With Balsamic Vinegar

15m4 to 6 servings
Brown Rice and Barley Salad with Sprouted Red Lentils and Green Beans
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Brown Rice and Barley Salad with Sprouted Red Lentils and Green Beans

This hearty salad, dressed with a creamy, spicy dressing, can be made with a number of different grains. I’ve been making iterations of this hearty whole grain salad tossed with a creamy, curry-spiced dressing since my earliest days of vegetarian cooking. My choice of grains for this version was a function of what I found in my pantry and my refrigerator: -- enough brown rice and barley to combine for a salad but not enough for a more substantial dish. Farro or spelt would also work. The split red lentils, soaked just long enough to soften and begin to sprout, contribute color and texture along with their grassy flavor. Tossing the grains with lemon juice while they’re still warm intensifies the flavors in the salad.

Serves 6
Carrots With Mint Vinaigrette
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Carrots With Mint Vinaigrette

15m2 servings
Edamame Tofu Dip
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Edamame Tofu Dip

Dairy-free, tahini-free, and rich in protein, this zesty, kid-pleasing dip is a lively, pale green alternative to hummus. Serve it with rice crackers, sliced daikon and/or carrot sticks as a dip, but it’s also thick enough to spread on bread or a pita as a sandwich filling. It will keep for three days in the fridge.

5m1 1/2 cups
Sourdough Stuffing With Kale and Dates
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Sourdough Stuffing With Kale and Dates

This stuffing from the chef Suzanne Goin, a Los Angeles native, pays tribute to California, with nods to the sourdough that you associate with fog-strewn San Francisco and to the almonds and dates of the Central Valley. Turkey sausage, kale and sliced chiles are also tossed into the mix. As Ms. Goin explained, “There is no egg and no real attempt to emulsify it like your mom’s stuffing — it’s loose, laid-back and doing its own thing, California-style.”

1h 15m8 servings
Turkey Gravy From Scratch
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Turkey Gravy From Scratch

The stock can be made weeks ahead; so can the gravy itself. The golden turkey fat from the roasting pan is reserved and forms the base for a rich roux. The finished gravy freezes beautifully and only needs to be whisked in a hot pan and tasted for salt and pepper before serving.

9h3 quarts, about 20 servings
Stir-Fried Balsamic Ginger Carrots
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Stir-Fried Balsamic Ginger Carrots

The carrots need to be cut as uniformly as possible so that all the vegetables cook in the same amount of time. If the carrots are skinny (about 1/2 to 3/4 inch in diameter), simply cut them into 2-inch pieces; if they’re medium (about 1 inch in diameter), cut lengthwise in half before cutting into 2-inch pieces; if they’re large (about 1 1/2 to 2 inches in diameter), quarter lengthwise before cutting into 2-inch pieces. Blanching the carrots reduces the amount of oil necessary to stir-fry. Mince the ginger by hand; if you use a grater or microplane, the ginger will be too wet and will spatter in the oil.

15m8 servings
Cranberry Parker House Rolls
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Cranberry Parker House Rolls

Here's a delightful, tangy twist on the fluffy breadbasket staple; cranberry butter is brushed between two layers of dough then baked until golden. They're fun, they're unexpected, they're delicious. (Bonus: they can be made ahead and frozen up to two weeks before.)

1h24 rolls
Crisp Spiced Chickpeas
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Crisp Spiced Chickpeas

Canned chickpeas bear a closer resemblance to cooked-from-dried than any other canned bean: They’re sturdy enough to withstand additional cooking without falling apart. Even after a 20-minute sizzle in a skillet with olive oil, they stay intact, their exteriors turning crunchy while their insides become creamy. Serve these as a party snack instead of roasted nuts, and you’ll have a hit. (The New York Times)

20m2 cups
Lumpia Shanghai
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Lumpia Shanghai

Lumpia are cousins to spring rolls, a tradition that most likely goes back to the Chinese traders who first visited the Philippines in the ninth century. As kids, we’d crowd around the kitchen counter to make them, spooning out the filling and rolling up the skins before sliding them into hot oil. They come in different incarnations and may be served unfried and even unwrapped, but the classic is lumpia Shanghai, skinny cigarillos with supercrunchy skins, packed with meat, juices seething. I like dipping them in banana ketchup, which you can buy or improvise by cooking overripe bananas and tomato paste into a sweet-and-sour jam.

1h 15m20 lumpia
Sautéed Endive With Balsamic Butter
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Sautéed Endive With Balsamic Butter

Searing the endives so they retain some crispness, then topping them with balsamic butter, gives this dish, adapted from the cookbook "Eat in My Kitchen" by Meike Peters, its panache. Because it’s hard to make less balsamic butter than is called for, you wind up with enough for about a dozen endives, not just three; the endives portion of the recipe can be easily expanded to match, making this a great dish for entertaining. Or, use the leftover butter to top fish, roasted carrots and such. The butter keeps well in the refrigerator but should be used at room temperature; heating may cause it to break down.

20m2 to 4 servings
Roasted Corn and Edamame Salad
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Roasted Corn and Edamame Salad

A late-summer side with lots of crunch, spice and herbs, this is great with anything grilled. Hugh Mangum, the New York chef of Texas lineage who started the Mighty Quinn’s Barbeque chain, has brightened up the traditional Texas plate of meat, meat, meat and white bread with fresh sides like this one. It holds up well overnight, too.

1h8 to 10 servings
Rice With Edamame
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Rice With Edamame

This dish is called mame gohan, the Japanese version of rice and beans. The beans are simmered in dashi seasoned with mirin and light soy sauce, and then the same cooking liquid is used for the rice. Before serving, the beans and rice are folded together, with a light dusting of salt and black sesame seeds.

45m6 servings
Yuca Frita (Deep-fried yuca)
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Yuca Frita (Deep-fried yuca)

30m6 servings
Miracle Mushroom Gravy
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Miracle Mushroom Gravy

This vegetarian gravy has all of the hearty sausage flavor without all of the meat. It came to The Times in 2012 by way of Amy Lawrence, and her husband, Justin Fox Burks, who write the Chubby Vegetarian blog.

30m6 servings
Stir-fried Succotash With Edamame
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Stir-fried Succotash With Edamame

While we’ve still got corn and peppers aplenty, make this Asian version of the American classic succotash. I love the combination of sweet and seared flavors in this dish.

10mServes six
Balsamic-Glazed Asparagus
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Balsamic-Glazed Asparagus

20m4 to 6 servings
Cheddar Cheese Puffs
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Cheddar Cheese Puffs

Cheddar replaces the more traditional Gruyère, Roquefort or Parmigiano-Reggiano in this French recipe for gougères. The Cheddar performs admirably.

45m36 puffs
Cold Cantaloupe Soup
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Cold Cantaloupe Soup

Cold cantaloupe soup has become a summer staple in my house, a quick and easy solution to the question of a first course at dinner. I have even served it in espresso cups for guests to sip with cocktails. All it takes is a ripe orange-fleshed melon, like a cantaloupe, or perhaps a musk melon from a farm stand. I chill the melon, and when I’m ready to prepare the soup, I peel and seed it, then cut it into chunks. I find that if I start with a small amount of the chunks in the blender and process them until they are puréed, I can then add the rest gradually with no need for additional liquid. The juice of one lime and salt to taste are all I add, except for a final drizzle of my best balsamic vinegar on top. You can add mint leaves, cayenne or even a garnish of diced prosciutto or feta instead of the vinegar if you wish.

10m6 servings
Poireaux Vinaigrette (Leeks vinaigrette)
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Poireaux Vinaigrette (Leeks vinaigrette)

30m4 servings