Vegetarian

6940 recipes found

Butter-Roasted Paneer With Tomato Curry
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Butter-Roasted Paneer With Tomato Curry

Roasting mild paneer with yogurt and ghee (or butter) gives it a complex, toasty flavor that’s balanced by the spices and gentle acidity of a quickly made tomato curry. This recipe is adapted from Anita Jaisinghani of Pondicheri in Houston. She prepares her own paneer several times a week to use in curries, salads and crumbled over roasted vegetables. But store-bought paneer will work well here and makes this satisfying dish supremely weeknight friendly. Serve it with rice or flatbread on the side, if you like, to catch the heady sauce. If you have dried fenugreek leaves, you can crumble a tablespoon or so into the curry right at the end.

30m3 to 4 servings
Spicy Pimentón Popcorn
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Spicy Pimentón Popcorn

Using more oil than popcorn, a technique developed by Jessica Koslow of Sqirl in Los Angeles, yields a particularly crisp and rich popcorn. Here, the kernels are popped, then tossed while still hot with a combination of sweet and hot smoked paprikas, and bit of earthy cumin. It's a complex mix that can be as hot as you can take it.

20mAbout 12 cups
Spinach and Endive Salad With Kasha and Mushrooms
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Spinach and Endive Salad With Kasha and Mushrooms

Kasha is not the main ingredient here, so I wouldn’t call this a grain salad, but rather a substantial leafy green salad with grain. I love pairing this nutty grain with both cooked and raw spinach, and with walnuts and walnut oil. Kasha also goes well with foods that have a bitter edge, like endive, so I included some in the salad.

15mServes 6
Romaine and Radish Salad With Buttermilk Lemon Dressing
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Romaine and Radish Salad With Buttermilk Lemon Dressing

Those of you who are getting loads of lettuce in your C.S.A. boxes may be tiring of salads, but this simple combination will never get old for me. Radishes look and taste beautiful against a romaine backdrop, and the creamy dressing is especially complementary. Radishes are rich in folic acid, vitamin C and anthocyanins, phytonutrients that are believed to have antioxidant properties.

10m4 to 6 servings
Pigeon Peas With Mango
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Pigeon Peas With Mango

This dish is based on a recipe from “660 Curries,” by Raghavan Iyer. I’ve given you the option of using cayenne and sesame seeds instead of Mr. Raghavan’s garam masala, but I encourage you to make the spice mix if you can. You can find pigeon peas and curry leaves in Indian markets. Pigeon peas resemble split yellow peas in color and flavor.

45mFour servings
Quinoa-Oat Crumble Topping
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Quinoa-Oat Crumble Topping

Lately I’ve been thinking about desserts and all the after-dinner delights that my gluten-intolerant friends are missing. Pies, for instance: I have yet to come up with a gluten-free pie crust that I like. But crumbles can make a fine alternative, because the topping requires none of the flour that gluten-intolerant diners can’t stomach. Crumbles are easy to throw together and are a perfect destination for seasonal fruit. In this recipe, I use flour made from quinoa — easy to do in a spice grinder — and gluten-free oats, which I ordered from Bob’s Red Mill. Crumbles require little added sugar. So that I can make crumbles on a whim, I make the topping in advance and keep it in the freezer. Bake the crumble halfway through without the topping, then sprinkle it on and finish baking close to serving time. The topping never gets soggy waiting for the fruit underneath to cook. I like to stir leftovers into my yogurt for breakfast. This topping can be used to make any number of delicious, gluten-free crumbles.

30mAbout 2 cups
Mango Lime Sorbet
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Mango Lime Sorbet

This sorbet is tangy and not very sweet. I added only enough sugar and corn syrup to allow the mixture to freeze properly without developing ice crystals.

35m1 quart, serving 5 to 6
Button Mushrooms à la Crème
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Button Mushrooms à la Crème

I enjoy wild mushrooms, but I happen to like ordinary white button mushrooms, too; the cultivated kind, the ones that are also called champignons de Paris (especially by the French). I suppose they are considered pedestrian in foodie circles, and that’s a pity. This recipe makes great use of them. It’s a simple one, with only a few ingredients: a bit of butter, a handful of sweet herbs and some tangy crème fraîche. Try it as an easy side dish or over noodles.

20m4 servings
Carrot Salad With Cumin and Coriander
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Carrot Salad With Cumin and Coriander

These lemony carrots taste lovely just as the recipe is written, perfumed with toasted cumin and coriander, a hint of garlic, and a touch of cayenne. This recipe draws its inspiration from Moroccan carrot salads, many of which use cooked vegetables, but this version uses slivered raw carrots instead. But if you want to splash out, try a pinch of cinnamon, and top with lots of fluffy chopped cilantro and thinly sliced jalapeño. Or add crumbled feta and olives. For the best-looking salad, use the julienne blade of a food processor, or cut the carrots into thin matchstick shapes with a sharp knife. The large holes of a box grater will work, too, but the result won’t be quite as attractive. (But avoid those supermarket bags of pre-grated carrots. They’re not suitable here.)

20m4 to 6 servings
Ratatouille Pie
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Ratatouille Pie

In this buttery, rustic pie, chunks of eggplant, zucchini and tomato are roasted with olive oil until velvety soft, then covered in a cheesy, mayonnaise-spiked custard. Chopped olives scattered on top cut through the richness and give the whole thing a salty tang. It's the perfect next-day use for ratatouille, should you have some. Use it here instead of roasting the vegetables. You’ll need about 3 to 4 cups (enough to fill the pie crust two-thirds of the way up). You can parbake the crust, roast the vegetables and make the custard the day before, but don’t bake everything together until the day of serving.

2h8 servings
Strawberries in a Mango Sea
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Strawberries in a Mango Sea

A ripe mango gives a bit when pressed, and its fragrance should be heady and sweet. To dice a mango, cut down the broad side of the fruit, slightly off center, from the stem end to the tip end. The knife should slide down against the flat side of the pit. Repeat on the other side, cutting as close to the pit as possible. Cut the flesh from the sides of the pit, following the curve of the pit. Lay each half on your cutting surface and score with the tip of your knife in a crosshatch pattern, down to — but not through — the skin. Lift the mango half, and press on the skin with your thumbs to turn it inside out. Little cubes will pop out on the other side, and you can easily cut them away from the skin. One summer I lived in Cuernavaca, Mexico, and I would gather mangoes from the ground in a park. If I had had a food processor or a blender, I would have made this every day.

45mServes eight
Buttermilk Mango Curry
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Buttermilk Mango Curry

25mServes 4
Pear Ginger Crumble
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Pear Ginger Crumble

This is one of my favorite crumbles, the one I make most often once the fruits of summer give way to apples and pears in the fall.

1hServes eight
Warm Millet, Carrot and Kale Salad With Curry-Scented Dressing
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Warm Millet, Carrot and Kale Salad With Curry-Scented Dressing

I love millet but it is tricky to cook; it can easily turn to mush. I have found that cooking more than 2/3 cup at a time can be problematic because the millet at the bottom of the pot becomes gummy by the time all of the millet is cooked. But the tiny, nutritious seeds of grain expand so much during cooking that you don’t need more than 2/3 of a cup for this recipe, and if you toast the seeds in a little oil first and take care not to stir the millet once you’ve added the water you will get a fluffy result.

2hServes 4 to 5
Steamed Parsleyed Cucumbers
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Steamed Parsleyed Cucumbers

15m4 servings
Carrot and Sweet Potato Soup With Mint or Tarragon
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Carrot and Sweet Potato Soup With Mint or Tarragon

This easy, beautiful purée makes a nice Thanksgiving opener, with the added benefit of extra doses of vitamin A, vitamin C, potassium and fiber. If you’re looking to get ahead with your meal, you can make this dish up to two days ahead of the big day.

1h 10mServes four to six
Apricot Crumble With Oatmeal Topping
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Apricot Crumble With Oatmeal Topping

Because apricots bake so quickly (the crumble needs only 20 minutes in a 400-degree oven) it’s important to bake the topping for this crisp ahead.

1h 20mYield: 8 servings
Rhubarb and Berry Crumble
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Rhubarb and Berry Crumble

45m4 servings
Mushrooms in Lettuce Wraps
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Mushrooms in Lettuce Wraps

20m4 servings
Summer Vegetables in Spiced Yogurt Sauce
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Summer Vegetables in Spiced Yogurt Sauce

The farmers’ market or a home garden may be the ideal source of summer vegetables for this seasonal main course. Feel free to substitute or add other garden gifts as available. Eggplant, green beans, small potatoes or okra would all be welcome. Substantial but light, and reminiscent of some kormas, it gets its rich, creamy consistency from a mixture of yogurt and almond flour. To get vegetarian recipes like this one delivered to your inbox, sign up for The Veggie newsletter.

30m4 to 6 servings
Cauliflower With Herbs
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Cauliflower With Herbs

15m4 servings
Stir-Fried Lettuce With Seared Tofu and Red Pepper
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Stir-Fried Lettuce With Seared Tofu and Red Pepper

Stir-frying is a great way to use up your overabundance of lettuce. This recipe calls for romaine, but you can try it with whatever you have on hand, as long as it’s sturdy enough to stand up to some heat. In China, where lettuce symbolizes prosperity and wealth, a simpler dish made with the lettuce only is served at New Year’s.

15m4 servings
Raspberry Crumble
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Raspberry Crumble

I made this crumble because I had some less-than-delicious raspberries on hand — when you bake them in a crumble, the flavors deepen. Most of the sweetness is in the topping; the filling is somewhat tart. The newest of the grainy crumble toppings that I keep on hand in the freezer, this one has a particularly nutty flavor because of its toasted flaxseeds. Use certified gluten-free oats if you like.

1h 45mServes eight
Gluten-Free Buckwheat, Poppy Seed and Blueberry Muffins
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Gluten-Free Buckwheat, Poppy Seed and Blueberry Muffins

The buckwheat flour is high-fiber and makes a dark, richly-flavored muffin. Already a big fan of buckwheat flour in pancakes, I decided to try it as the main ingredient in a gluten-free muffin and love the results. It is a high-fiber flour and makes a dark, richly-flavored muffin.

45m12 muffins (1/3 cup muffin tins)