Side Dish

4106 recipes found

Raclette
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Raclette

40m4 servings
Fennel Rice
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Fennel Rice

This is a simple Greek recipe, traditionally served at Lent, that works as a main or side dish. it calls for rice but can also be made with bulgur for a nuttier, heartier flavor.

1hServes 6
Tomatillo Pineapple Salsa
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Tomatillo Pineapple Salsa

This fiercely bright salsa comes from Eduardo Rivera, who runs a farm called Sin Fronteras ("without borders") in Minnesota. Resist the temptation to eat it right out of the blender; it's best after it's been chilled at least an hour.

20mAbout 3 cups
Spring Rolls With Thai Basil
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Spring Rolls With Thai Basil

1h 30m12 large rolls
Sweet Potato and Goat Cheese Gratin With Black Olives
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Sweet Potato and Goat Cheese Gratin With Black Olives

1h 45m4 servings as a side dish
Fatima’s Fingers (Tunisian Egg Rolls)
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Fatima’s Fingers (Tunisian Egg Rolls)

These deep-fried pastries, which are known as “doigts de fatima” in French, are named after the prophet Muhammad’s daughter and her delicate fingers. They are commonly eaten to break the fast during Ramadan, but are also enjoyed year round, especially at weddings. While this particular recipe is Tunisian, many North African and Middle Eastern countries have their own versions. They are typically made with thin, delicate malsouka pastry sheets, but spring roll wrappers are used here instead. The fillings are wide-ranging (you may find versions with tuna, shrimp, ground beef or vegetables) and flexible: Feel free to omit the chicken in this recipe for a tasty vegetarian snack.

2h4 servings
Kenmare’s Asparagus Gratin
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Kenmare’s Asparagus Gratin

1h 10m4 servings
Scalloped Scallops
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Scalloped Scallops

35m4 servings
Vegan Broccoli Spigarello
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Vegan Broccoli Spigarello

15m2 to 3 servings
Persian Herb Frittata
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Persian Herb Frittata

This beautiful, verdant Persian-style frittata is made from a recipe that at first glance looks ridiculous. It’s not the list of ingredients, which sound fresh and lovely with heaps of parsley, cilantro, scallions and lettuce. It’s the last line, Step No. 4, which calls for cooking one side of the frittata 40 minutes, then flipping it over, and cooking the other side 40 more minutes. In the interminable 80 minutes that it cooks, several things happen. The vegetables give up their moisture, the frittata shrinks in height by two-thirds, and the outside becomes a slightly crisp, dark, golden brown — without burning.

2h4 large appetizers
Crunchy Noodle Kugel à la Great-Aunt Martha
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Crunchy Noodle Kugel à la Great-Aunt Martha

The genius of this sweet noodle kugel — the rich, custardy casserole that is a staple of Jewish cooking — is that its top is designed to offer maximum crunch while its interior remains creamy and luscious. The secret: use a jellyroll pan, which means that there is a greater amount of kugel surface area to brown in the oven, and bake it at a slightly higher temperature. Soaking the raisins in sherry or orange juice adds flavor, and also keeps them from burning in the extra-hot oven.

1h8 to 12 servings
Jeweled Grains With Broccoli, Peas and Red Onion
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Jeweled Grains With Broccoli, Peas and Red Onion

Inspired by Persian jeweled rice and grain bowls, this dish combines brown rice, farro and black sticky rice with a jumble of shaved broccoli, pickled red onion, pistachios, sunflower seeds and dried cranberries. When cooking multiple grains, pick ones that more or less require the same grain-to-water ratio and cook time so you can cook them all together in the same pot. This dish can be served warm, cold or at room temperature, served over salad greens or topped with flaky fish. It is endlessly adaptable based on the season or the contents of your fridge.

45m4 to 6 servings
The Simplest Corn Pudding
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The Simplest Corn Pudding

This recipe is deliberately, exquisitely simple, with pure sweet corn flavor. Grate corn kernels directly into a cast-iron pan and place in the oven, without any seasonings. The corn releases its milk, which thickens, and the kernels turn golden and lightly caramelized around the edges. Only then do you season it, and only lightly: A bit of butter, a sprinkle of salt and cayenne, and the juice of half a lime. Mix. Serve. Adding the seasoning at the end allows you to better control the taste of the finished dish.

40m3 servings
Simmered Kabocha Squash With Scallions
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Simmered Kabocha Squash With Scallions

When you can’t eat one more roasted winter vegetable, this bright, fragrant soup-stew does the trick. It's from “A Common Table” by Cynthia Chen McTernan, who publishes a food blog called Two Red Bowls. Kabocha, which she calls her “soul-mate squash,” has a special earthy texture and a nutty flavor, but you could also do this with buttercup squash. Serve as a side dish, or as a light dinner with freshly cooked rice and a fried egg.

20m6 to 8 servings
Apple Preserves With Cardamom
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Apple Preserves With Cardamom

This apple compote with cardamom is a welcome addition to the Rosh Hashana table. Some Iraqi Jews substitute rose water for the cardamom. After the prayer over the new fruit of the year, they eat a symbolic spoonful of the sweet preserves.

50mAbout 1 1/2 cups
Leeks With Caraway Seeds
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Leeks With Caraway Seeds

15mFour to six servings
Lemon-Lime Satin Creams
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Lemon-Lime Satin Creams

Here is an easy, citrusy dessert that can be made ahead of time for the most part. Mix lemon and lime zest with eggs, sugar and cream, and then refrigerate for up to two days -- the longer the better. Then, bake it in ramekins for about half an hour, and serve. Superfine sugar can be found in the baking aisle or made with regular sugar using a mortar and pestle.

45m6 servings
Jicama Relish In Chilpotle Marinade
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Jicama Relish In Chilpotle Marinade

25mAbout six cups
Neapolitan Cake
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Neapolitan Cake

Here is an excellent project recipe that Christine Muhlke, then an editor and columnist at The New York Times Magazine, brought to us in a 2007 profile of the cookbook writer Gail Monaghan, who adapted it from a cookbook written by the Vicomte de Mauduit in 1933. It is infinitely more chic and cosmopolitan than most Neapolitan cakes, with no cartoon hue or bulk.

2h 45m6 to 8 servings
Chinese Sausage-Rice Dressing
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Chinese Sausage-Rice Dressing

1hEight to 10 servings as a side dish
Beet Dip With Labneh
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Beet Dip With Labneh

This recipe for a delicious raw beet dip comes from Botanica, a vegetable-focused restaurant in Los Angeles run by Emily Fiffer and Heather Sperling. The recipe is easy — throw everything into the blender raw — though it requires a little time for the blades to break down the beets with walnuts, olive oil and a few other aromatics. Fiffer and Sperling cleverly adapted the dip from muhammara, the Middle Eastern spread made from red peppers. Using beets creates another dish altogether, but one that tastes bright, sweet and earthy. Serve it with a dollop of labneh, as well as warm pita and quartered Persian cucumbers for dipping, and generously drizzle everything with olive oil and crunchy salt.

10m4 to 6 servings
Steak ’N’ Bacon Cheddar Meatballs
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Steak ’N’ Bacon Cheddar Meatballs

This is essentially a bacon cheeseburger in meatball form. The cooked steak should be diced into small bites, not ground, for the best texture.

45mAbout 2 dozen meatballs, 6 to 8 servings
Jalapeno Beer Biscuits
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Jalapeno Beer Biscuits

30mAbout a dozen biscuits
Stilton Soufflé
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Stilton Soufflé

1hServes 4