Dairy
Coconut-Chocolate Chip Cupcakes
By Susan Reid
Salt-Crusted Beets with Horseradish Crème Fraîche
Here's a great new way to roast beets: in a salt crust. The horseradish, thyme, and orange in the crust infuse the beets with bright flavor as they're cooking. Leftover beets make a great addition to salads. Lightly coat torn butter lettuce with a Sherry wine vinaigrette, top with the sliced beets and some sliced red onion, and drizzle with a bit of the horseradish crème fraîche.
By Dan Barber
Pears in Honey and Pine Nut Caramel with Artisanal Cheese
If your pears are on the dry side, the caramel will form more quickly than if they are juicy. Any variety of pears can be used in this recipe, but Bosc pears hold up especially well because of their firm texture. Almost any cheese would be great with the pears: Head to your local farmers' market or cheese shop and do some sampling.
By Deborah Madison
Middle Eastern Bison Meatballs with Cilantro-Yogurt Sauce
Serve with warm flatbread or pita bread.
By Bruce Aidells
Lamb Sausage Patties with Fresh Mint, Feta, and Garlic
By Molly Wizenberg
Broccoli Rabe with Bulgur and Walnuts
Grains and nuts are great at balancing the bitterness of broccoli rabe.
By Mark Bittman
Whole Grain Pancakes with Blueberry-Maple Syrup
Using whole grain flour and wheat germ in these pancakes isn’t just a healthy gimmick that adds fiber and protein—it also adds a nutty flavor that tastes really, really good.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Pomegranate Panna Cotta
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Multi-Grain Pasta with Sicilian Salsa Verde, Cabbage, and Haricots Verts
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Leek and Asparagus Frittata
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Fried Chicken Salad
This recipe is a fun alternative to the heavier dishes that tend to make an appearance at Super Bowl parties. A few variations can be made to this salad as well: Make it Buffalo style by tossing the chicken in a little hot sauce just after you've fried it. You can also vary the cheese (by using goat or Feta) and other salad ingredients (like lettuce type) according to taste.
Freezing the cheese will make it firmer and much easier to grate.
By Todd English
Caramel Cake
While this little square cake may appear modest, its caramel flavor drew everyone in our test kitchens back for seconds and even thirds. Buttermilk lends a subtle tang and tenderizes the yellow cake, but it's the sweet glaze that really makes this dessert special.
By Ruth Cousineau
Mile-High Chocolate Cake
This four-layer stunner may just render all your other chocolate-cake recipes obsolete. A generous amount of sour cream keeps the cake layers tender, and the frosting is a glossy triumph. It's a natural fit for practically any get-together—from a simple family birthday celebration to an elaborate dinner party.
By Ruth Cousineau
Buttermilk Cookies
Miss Lewis mentions buttermilk cookies, which she pairs with ice-cold lemonade, but as far as we know, she never committed a recipe to paper. When we developed one, the big debate was about texture: Soft or crisp? What you see here is the cookie of your dreams, with a tender interior and the slightest bit of crispness around the edge.
By Edna Lewis
Spoon-Bread Muffins
These muffins truly give the flavor of corn its due. They're not sweetened like corn bread (meaning like "Yankee" corn bread, says Peacock), and they have a very fine, almost custardy texture, from the extra-fine grind of the cornmeal (which makes them reminiscent of spoon bread). "Honey and soft butter play to the creamy, tangy flavor of the muffins particularly well," says Peacock.
By Scott Peacock
Crusty Buttermilk Biscuits
The cliché, in this case, turns out to be true: Biscuits benefit from TLC. Peacock recommends White Lily flour, one of the lightest available, along with lard for a flaky texture so fluffy and airy that the biscuits almost float off the plate. One bite may well move you to tears—either with memories of your southern grandmother, or with regret for not having had a southern grandmother.
By Scott Peacock
Pimento Cheese Toasts
In its usual form, pimento cheese is a blend of mayonnaise, sharp Cheddar cheese, and pimentos that induces nostalgia. Here, made with roasted peppers and spread on tiny toasts, then broiled to transform it into hot melted heaven, it dresses up for a party with a nod and a wink.
By Scott Peacock