Swiss Chard

2 recipes found

Baked Chard Salad With Cranberries
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Sep 18, 2025

Baked Chard Salad With Cranberries

What’s the difference between a baked salad and a regular old bowl of roasted vegetables? The easiest answer is that the leafy green ratio in a baked salad is high, and I only hope that makes the satisfaction factor high, too. Now the difference between a baked salad and your typical salad is that instead of crunching through the raw stuff in a typical salad, you dress the greens (and in this case, cabbage) in a bit of olive oil and salt before roasting them down into tender, softened bites. Roasting the vegetables is a precursor to coating them with dressing, giving them their first coat of olive oil before a highly acidic vinaigrette rounds it all out. I usually say you can skip herbs if they aren’t in your fridge, but the parsley is really helpful here: It freshens up the salad so you don’t get any flavor fatigue.

55m4 servings
One-Pot Chicken With Greens and Beans
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking
Sep 17, 2025

One-Pot Chicken With Greens and Beans

This surprisingly quick one-pot chicken braise leans on the tartness of lime juice to brighten shredded chicken thighs, well-cooked Swiss chard, white beans and parsley. While the chicken browns deeply on one side, the chopped greens, onion and beans are piled into the pot and wilt, absorbing the rising heat and bubbling fat. Everything gets stirred together with a generous squeeze of lime juice and simmers until the chicken shreds easily. With minimal prep and cleanup, this recipe is also versatile: The chard and parsley can easily be substituted with other vegetables and herbs, like spinach and dill.

35m4 servings