Garlic
Tomato Salad with Feta and Olives
Be sure to serve this with thick slices of good bread to soak up the dressing.
By Debra Creed-Broeker
Traditional Crab Cakes '21' Club
Because these crab cakes are made with lots of crab meat and not much filler, they require gentle handling during cooking, but the results are well worth the extra effort.
At the restaurant '21' the chef makes decorative squiggles with the chili mayonnaise using a plastic squeeze-bottle of the type used for ketchup at hot dog stands.
Greek-Style Sea Scallop Brochettes
If you can't find fresh sea scallops, use peeled large shrimp, leaving the tails on. Rice pilaf or orzo would be a good accompaniment.
Fresh Peach Chutney
By Michael Lomonaco
Rosemary-Roasted Chicken and Garlic
Complete the main course with buttered sweet potato chunks (they can roast alongside the chicken) and sautéed Swiss chard. Serve purchased éclairs for dessert.
Spinach, Mustard Green and Potato Soup
Mustard greens, increasingly common in supermarkets today, cook as quickly as fresh spinach. Their assertive taste is terrific here in a warming winter soup.
Grilled Striped Bass with Lemon and Fennel
For best results, use a grill basket. It should be big enough for the fish but snug enough to keep the fish and lemon slices from moving around. The one we used in the Bon Appétit test kitchen was 17 by 6 inches.
Lemon-Garlic Olives
These can be enjoyed on their own, added to recipes or used to embellish a Martini.
Enza's 10-Clove Magro
(Garlic Roast Beef)
My husband's Aunt Enza has played an important role in my life as a born-again Tuscan. We often dine at her home on Sundays for a traditional family lunch. The main course is usually what Enza calls magro, which can actually mean meatless but in Enza's lexicon signifies merely a lean or fatless choice cut of beef, sliced thin, lightly sauced with meat juices, and topped with golden brown cloves of garlic. Because Italian home cooks in cities rarely had ovens until the postwar period, meats were often cooked on top of the stove, as is Enza's. It's faster than oven-roasting and a perfect technique for people who love rare "roast" beef.
By Faith Willinger
Bell Pepper and Tomato Relish
By Marisol Benadayan-Bennaroch