Mushroom
Fettuccine with Mushroom-Gorgonzola Sauce
This satisfying pasta is an easy-to-make entrée to serve after a night on the town. Just add a salad, bread, and some sorbet and biscotti to complete the meal.
Penne with Sausage, Wild Mushrooms and Spinach
Button mushrooms would also be fine here.
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Mushroom Spinach Salad with Tarragon Egg Dressing
We took an old favorite and reserved the usual proportions of spinach and mushrooms to create Mushroom Spinach Salad With Tarragon Egg Dressing.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Mushroom Gravy
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Asparagus and Mushroom Salad with Shaved Parmesan
Although raw asparagus might seem unusual to those who have only eaten asparagus cooked, it is delicious. The slightly different flavor is highlighted in the following salad.
Super 'Shrooms
This recipe comes from my brother, Chris, a high-school athletic coach. If you think stuffed mushrooms sound too foofy for Super Bowl Sunday, I refer you to "Little" Brother. He tells me they are winners every time. There's plenty of room for play in the recipe. The only firm rule: Use more crab than cream cheese.
Orecchiette with Mushrooms, Arugula, Tomatoes, and Brie
At Woodside in West Los Angeles, owner Noel Ampel and executive chef Nigel Faulkner both believe in taking the freshest ingredients and combining them in simple, yet highly sophisticated ways. This pasta is a fine example of that philosophy. A basket of crusty warm rolls and a salad of mixed baby greens with a Sherry vinaigrette are great accompaniments. End with coffee gelato and chocolate-dipped biscotti.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Sea Bass with Gingered Vegetable Stir-Fry
In this light yet intensely flavored dish, the fish is baked, then served with a sauce rich in Asian flavors. Offer with steamed white rice, and pour white wine or Champagne.
Pasta with Dino's Marinara Sauce
The sauce is a recipe from Sue Ann's father. She uses it with purchased tortellini in this recipe, but she also pours it over chicken, which is then baked, for an instant cacciatore-style dish.
Roast Veal Brisket with Marsala-Mushroom Sauce
This hearty winter entrée can be prepared several days ahead. Veal brisket is the boned veal breast. If you don't have a roasting pan large enough to hold both briskets, divide the ingredients in half and bake in two pans. If the veal is difficult to find, substitute one 5-pound flat-cut beef brisket and roast until tender, about 3 1/2 hours. Leftovers freeze well and make great sandwiches.
Vegetable Ragoût with Parmesan and Balsamic Vinegar
Ragoût de petits L
égumes au Parmesan et Vinaigre Balsamique
Also nice as a meatless entrée—with some crusty French bread, of course.
Shiitake and Ricotta Patties
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Mixed Wild Mushroom Risotto
A radicchio and fennel salad with red wine vinaigrette adds color and crunch, and warm focaccia rounds out the entrée. End the meal with poached pears and biscotti.
Cauliflower Soup with White Truffle Oil
The truffle oil is not essential, but it's a nice indulgent touch. Since the oil's flavor dissipates with heat, add the oil to this first-course soup just before serving.
Greek-Style Chicken and Mushrooms
Daphne serves the <epi:recipeLink id="5452"Rice with Spinach and Feta Cheese</epi:recipeLink> alongside this flavorful chicken dish.
The Amazing Low-Fat Chopped Liver
My Grammie Ethel was best known for her cookies and fudge. But she also made a mean chopped liver. What was remarkable about Grammie Ethel's chopped liver was how mild, light and fluffy it was—it didn't taste too much like liver. (This is important when you're eight years old and a finicky eater.) Her secret was the high proportion of hard-boiled egg whites to liver. And the hand-cranked metal meat grinder my grandmother used her whole life to grind the ingredients into a chunky purée. Low-fat chopped liver might seem like an oxymoron. After all, liver is one of the fattiest and most cholesterol-laden substances known to man. By replacing most of the liver with mushrooms (keeping just enough liver for flavor) and by roasting the ingredients in a hot oven instead of sautéeing them, we create a chopped liver that explodes with flavor and is mercifully light on fat. I'm sure my grandmother would have approved. Note: To be in strict accordance with the kashrut, you would boil, not roast, the chicken liver. (This is considered a more effective way to remove the blood.)
Preparation time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes