Weeknight
3493 recipes found

Brown Rice Salad With Mushrooms and Endive
Triticale is a hybrid grain made from wheat and rye, which farmers and health food stores alike had high hopes for in the 1970s. It is a good source of phosphorus and a very good source of magnesium, but apparently the yields were disappointing to farmers and it never really caught on among consumers. I had sort of forgotten about it until I came across it again recently at Bob’s Red Mill. I like its chewy texture and earthy flavor, both very similar to farro or wheatberries. Any hearty, toothsome grain works well in this salad, so I’ve given you a choice.

Southwestern Beef Stew

Soba Noodles With Chicken and Snap Peas
A simple sesame-soy dressing coats chewy soba noodles, tender chicken and crisp sugar snap peas in this dish that's good at room temperature or cold. It’s a great way to use leftover or store-bought rotisserie chicken, but also works well without. You can double up on the snap peas instead or fold in other vegetables, like grated carrots, shredded cabbage or thinly sliced bok choy. The quick daikon pickles add a bright tangy crunch, but you can skip them and still enjoy this one-bowl meal.

Cumin-Scented Barley

Fennel-Steamed Mussels Provencal

Sake Salmon With Black Bean Sauce

Mushroom and Daikon Soup

Rabbit Stew With Tomatoes And Green Olives

Sake-Steamed Chicken With Ginger and Scallions
“Steamed chicken is not the kind of dish that makes my mouth water,” Melissa Clark wrote in 2011, when bringing this recipe to The Times. But she made an exception for this dish, inspired by Harris Salat, who helps run the website Japanesefoodreport.com. Here, a full chicken is steamed for about an hour and a half over a mixture of sake and water, leaving it soft and flavorful.

Trout With Chive Butter
You can make this speedy dish casual and after-work-friendly or fancy enough for company. It all depends on how you garnish it. Using trout or salmon roe turns it into something quite deluxe, with the small pearls of caviar popping in your mouth. But a sprinkling of saline capers is nearly as delicious, at a fraction of the cost. No matter which you choose, the fish itself a snap to prepare. The butterflied whole trout broils up in under five minutes. After that it's smeared with a garlicky compound butter, which melts into a fragrant, savory sauce. Serve this dish with boiled new potatoes, crusty bread or rice to catch all the buttery juices.

Steamed Fish With Thyme and Tomato Vinaigrette

Chicken Livers, With Tagliatelle

Baked Trout, With Cucumber

Bolognese Sauce (An Italian tomato and meat sauce)

Steamed Sole with Smoked Trout Consommé

Zuppa di Pesce

Trout Papillote Style With Lemon And Olives

Herb-Stuffed Trout

Swordfish With Scallions and Cracked Peppercorns
This is the sort of dish to cook in the early days of spring when, as Florence Fabricant put it, "freshness, greenery and a touch of peppery spice are the most tempting." Ms. Fabricant brought the recipe to The Times in a 1991 review of "Cooking for All Seasons," by Jimmy Schmidt, then chef and owner of the Rattlesnake Club and Tre Vite Restaurants in Detroit.

Pork Chops Ni,coise

Stir-Fried Brown Rice With Kale or Frizzy Mustard Greens and Tofu
I used a beautiful green I’d never seen before called frizzy mustard greens for this quick and easy stir-fry. They look like a cross between frisée and curly kale and have a sharp, mustardy kick. Curly kale makes a fine substitute. Also, you can substitute white rice for the brown.

Brook Trout With Panko Stuffing

Sauteed Trout With Lime

Soba Noodles in Broth With Sweet Potato, Cabbage and Spinach
This simple Japanese soup can be served as a meal or as a starter. As the sweet potatoes and cabbage simmer in the broth of your choice, they infuse it with sweetness. Spinach is added at the last minute, and the soup is served with cooked soba noodles.