Side Dish
4106 recipes found

Roasted Corn and Tomato Salsa
Grilling tomatoes, jalapeños and corn makes for a nice mix of flavors. The sweetness of the corn contrasts well with the charred and picante flavors of the salsa. I’ve added corn to salsa fresca before, but this time, eyeing generous ears of corn on the cob in the market, I imagined it grilled or roasted in a roasted tomato salsa. I used as a starting point the renowned chef Rick Bayless’s terrific roasted jalapeño tomato salsa with fresh cilantro, from a book he published in 1998 called “Salsas That Cook.” After I had grilled the tomatoes and jalapeño under a broiler (you could also cook them on a grill), I grilled an ear of corn, also under a broiler. The kernels take on a beautiful color, and their sweetness contrasts nicely with the charred and picante flavors that run through this salsa. The corn also contributes crunch. The salsa is great with tacos, chips, and grains, and is particularly good with chicken.

Passatelli

Scallion Risotto

Stock With Asian Spices

Basic Enhanced Canned Stock

Risotto Venetian-style

Fish stock

Salsa Fresca with Kohlrabi
Kohlrabi, with its crisp texture, is a pleasant surprise diced into this tomato salsa. It goes well with chips, nachos, tacos and quesadillas, or with fish and chicken. For the past month, I’ve been a guest on the New York Times’s Motherlode Blog, helping out Renee Ruder and her family in Bend, Ore., put more vegetarian meals on the table using produce they receive in their community-supported agriculture basket each week. She received kohlrabi one week and was at a loss as to what to do with it. I had some suggestions for ways to use the vegetable in main dishes, and now I’ve come up with a way to use it in a side. The kohlrabi has a crisp texture much like that of jicama, with a nice cruciferous flavor. This salsa fresca would be welcome with just about any tostada, nacho or taco, with chips, or as a condiment with fish or chicken.

Truffled Potatoes Sarladaise

Honeycrisp Apple and Parsnip Soup
Here's a creamy, savory and sweet soup that perfectly captures the flavors of fall. Amy Lawrence, and her husband, Justin Fox Burks, the authors of the Chubby Vegetarian blog, brought it to The Times in 2012.

Puréed Winter Squash Soup With Ginger
One of the most comforting dishes you can make with winter squash is a puréed soup. I use rice to thicken this one, but you could also use a potato, or not add additional starch at all, as the squash itself has a lot of body. To enhance the flavor, this one calls for ginger, with a little lime juice and a swirl of yogurt added before serving.

Pureed Carrot Soup
This rice-thickened French classic, known as Potage de Crécy, is simple and comforting. You can garnish it with any number of chopped fresh herbs, as well as with croutons.

Ceviche Verde With Tostadas and Avocado

Braised Fennel and Rice

Carrot-Tahini Soup With Coriander, Turmeric and Lemon
Here's a simple carrot soup with loads of garlic and lemon for punch, with some tahini puréed in at the end. It is tangy, nutty, very creamy and intensely flavored, like liquid hummus with a gentle sweetness.

Norwegian Pumpkin Soup
I call my soup Norwegian Pumpkin Soup, but not because it emanates from Norway. It's just that I add to the cooked and blended pumpkin a couple of cupfuls of Norwegian Jarlsberg cheese; if you wish to turn this into Swiss Pumpkin Soup, no geographical sleight of hand is needed. You just use Gruyère. Either way, the sweet nuttiness of the mild, deep-flavored cheese adds depth and tone (and protein) to the pumpkin.

Blender Cucumber Yogurt Soup With Cumin and Paprika
This is so refreshing that I like to pour it into a glass and drink it as I would a lassi.

Creamy Leek Soup
I usually pair leeks with potatoes to make a creamy puree, but this time I used basmati rice, and the results are comforting and delicious. You could add something creamy to this if you wanted to – yogurt or milk or creme fraiche. But I found it utterly satisfying with no further enrichment.

Gratin Of Flageolet Beans

Dill Soup
This creamy puree can be served hot or cold, so it makes a great summer soup.

Forager’s Soup
This simple soup, packed with greens, is adapted from “Forgotten Skills of Cooking,” by Darina Allen (Kyle Books, 2009). It’s ready in 20 minutes, or can even be made in advance, for a creamy soup that warms and comforts while being highly versatile. Use any spring greens you like, whether sorrel, dandelion greens or chives. And make it vegetarian by using vegetable stock, and omitting the chorizo bits.

Couscous Risotto

Puréed Zucchini Soup With Curry
Just the right amount of basmati rice contributes just the right amount of substance to this beautiful, light spring soup.

Fresh Pea Soup With Miso
This simple Japanese-inflected soup has a delicate green flavor and a lovely creamy consistency. Served in small bowls, it makes a perfect beginning to a spring meal. Using white miso (shiro miso) keeps the soup light; red miso (a k a miso) gives it a nutty, more earthy flavor. Both are good. Japanese groceries sell fragrant shiso leaves in tiny bunches, and also offer the best choices for soft, silken tofu.