Cured Meat
Microwave Polenta
Offer this Italian cornmeal side dish in place of potatoes or rice. It's best served immediately out of the oven.
By Lydia Ravello
Corn Bread Panzanella
By Frank Stitt
Herbed Clam Hash
Satisfying accompaniments for this clever hash would be steamed broccoli and a salad of crisp romaine lettuce with red wine vinaigrette and some shaved Parmesan cheese. We recommend serving slices of Boston cream pie afterward.
Liver, Bacon, and Onions Down-Home Style
By Karen Vanersloot-Richards
Cornish Game Hens with Pancetta, Juniper Berries and Beets
Sauté any remaining greens from the beets to serve on the side with the lentils with port-glazed shallots . A Moulin-à-Vent is the wine of choice; purchased cheesecake topped with cherries marinated in brandy and sugar is a scrumptious finale.
Scallops and Haricots Verts with Creamy Bacon Vinaigrette
Serve with: Unoaked California Chardonnay • wild rice with spring herbs • watercress with orange juice vinaigrette • lemon curd tart with strawberry sauce
Sweet Potato Corn Bread Stuffing with Greens and Bacon
Inspired by the cooking of the American South—and absolutely delicious.
Lamb en Daube
By James Beard
Tacchino Ripieno
Turkey Stuffed with Chestnuts and Prunes
This is definitely my favorite way to do turkey because it never comes out dry. My wife, Susi, is always upset when she sees me prepare this abstract-looking sausage of a gobbler, but she's happy when she eats the tender and succulent meat and stuffing, all encased in a crisp and well-seasoned skin. The advantages of this method are twofold: it's in the oven only for an hour, freeing up cooking space for other dishes; and carving is simplicity itself — just cut straight through, like a regular roast.
By Mario Batali
Creamy Fettuccine with Bacon
By Deborah Serangeli
Flemish Beef Stew
Serve with: Buttered noodles and steamed Swiss chard. Dessert: A bakery Linzertorte.
Mesclun Salad with Goat Cheese-Stuffed Figs Wrapped in Bacon
The aged goat cheese called for in this recipe is firmer than fresh and has a dry rind. Two kinds work best in this dish, Bucheron and Pouligny-St.-Pierre, both of which have just the right amount of tang — but ask at the cheese counter for comparable substitutes if you have trouble finding them. Cafe Pasqual's, in Santa Fe, serves its version of this dish — "pigs 'n' figs" — with blue cheese.
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 45 min
Onion and Sage Tarts
These splendidly rich tarts are my version of French onion galettes. Buttery, flaky pastry crusts are filled with deeply caramelized onions that are generously laced with sage.
The steps to prepare these tarts may seem familiar, but if you take extra care with them, you'll be amazed by the results. Handle the pastry with precision so that it bakes tender, flaky, and shatteringly crisp; spend the time to slowly and thoroughly caramelize the onions until they melt into a golden marmalade; and give the tarts their final baking as close to serving time as possible.
You'll notice the onions are caramelized in a deep saucepan instead of a wide skillet. It makes them easier to stir without flying out of the pan and gives them a chance to soften and stew in their own liquid before it boils away. Once the liquid evaporates, the onions will concentrate and brown, and the balsamic vinegar works to balance the sweetness of the onions and deepen their color. For the best flavor, the whole process should take at least half an hour. Be sure to use regular yellow onions, not Walla Walla, Vidalia, or other sweeter summer onions—they have too much water and do not caramelize well.
Serve the tarts as an hors d'oeuvre at any elegant occasion, or as an accompaniment to a seasonal salad for a light lunch or supper.
By Jerry Traunfeld