Vegetarian
6930 recipes found

Fettuccine With Artichoke Hearts

Singapore Noodles

Endive and Beet Salad

Marcel Desaulnier's Apple, Pear and Raisin Chutney

Vanilla Bean Shortbread

Double Vanilla Poundcake

Pierre Franey’s Creamed Spinach
"I happen to have a minor passion for creamed spinach," Pierre Franey wrote in The Times in 1987. His passion shines here with this simple, richly flavored dish. Spinach that has been cooked briefly and pureed in a food processor is combined with a fast bechamel sauce. The result is just so good.

Gratin of Sweet Potatoes

Craig Claiborne’s Cornbread

Provencal Pumpkin From Claudia Roden

Baked Apples With Calvados

Pears Baked in Grappa

Carrot and Potato Puree

Fresh Tomato And Goat Cheese Tart

Claudia Roden’s Orange and Almond Cake
Moira Hodgson rooted this classic out of Claudia Roden’s terrific cookbook, “Everything Tastes Better Outdoors,” and brought it to The Times in 1987: a flourless orange and almond cake that goes beautifully with blueberries or peaches, and is the perfect thing to carry along on a picnic. Extremely moist, it consists of two seeded oranges (peel and all), ground almonds, sugar and eggs – and no flour. Baked in a hot oven, it will be done in just about an hour or so, longer if the orange pulp is extremely wet. Opening the oven door to check will not harm it.

Tortellini Salad With Corn

Peaches and Blackberries in Brandied Blackberry Sauce
Sometimes the idea is not to be original or creative in the kitchen, but merely to be expedient and to satisfy. The fresh produce of summer makes this easier. Here, peaches and blackberries – the freshest to be found – soak in an easy, no-cook brandy sauce until you’re ready to eat them. Top with creme fraiche, or not. Either way, the “black honey of summer,” as Mary Oliver wrote, is yours.

Brie and Artichoke Custard Pie

Lemon Meringue Pie
This adaptation of Alice Waters’s lemon meringue pie, which came to the Times in a 1987, takes a little time, but your efforts will be rewarded with a spectacular centerpiece dessert: a cloud of toasted meringue atop a pool of buttery and bright lemon curd in a light and flaky crust. If you can’t find Meyer lemons, which aren’t as tangy as regular lemons, and have a spicy, floral note, regular supermarket lemons will make a worthy substitute. This recipe makes an elegant pie with a restrained ratio of lemon curd to meringue, but if you want more of a showstopper — the towering kind you might find in a diner or at a church picnic, for instance — you can double the filling as some of our readers do, and as we did for the photograph above. (Although you certainly could, we did not double the meringue. If you don't, save the leftover egg whites for another use.)

Succotash With Hominy

Asparagus Tart

Quick Salsa

20-Minute Creamed Spinach
