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Root Vegetable

How to Buy and Store Garlic

Garlic. Everyone uses it, but do you know the right ways to buy and store it?

Zuni Roast Chicken with Bread Salad

The Zuni roast chicken depends on three things, beginning with the small size of the bird. Don't substitute a jumbo roaster—it will be too lean and won't tolerate high heat, which is the second requirement of the method. Small chickens, 2-3/4 to 3-1/2 pounds, flourish at high heat, roasting quickly and evenly, and, with lots of skin per ounce of meat, they are virtually designed to stay succulent. Your store may not promote this size for roasting, but let them know you'd like it. I used to ask for a whole fryer, but since many people don't want to cut up their own chickens for frying (or anything else), those smaller birds rarely make it to the display case intact; most are sacrificed to the "parts" market. But it is no secret that a whole fryer makes a great roaster—it's the size of bird favored for popular spit-roasted chickens to-go. It ought to return to retail cases. The third requirement is salting the bird at least 24 hours in advance. This improves flavor, keeps it moist, and makes it tender. We don't bother trussing the chicken—I want as much skin as possible to blister and color. And we don't rub the chicken with extra fat, trusting its own skin to provide enough. But if the chicken is about method, the bread salad is more about recipe. Sort of a scrappy extramural stuffing, it is a warm mix of crispy, tender, and chewy chunks of bread, a little slivered garlic and scallion, a scatter of currants and pine nuts, and a handful of greens, all moistened with vinaigrette and chicken drippings.

3 Surprising Ways to Cook With Carrots

Can carrots can go beyond soup and salad? We'll let these recipes for carrot pizza sauce, carrot pickles, and carrot steak—yes, steak—answer that.

Think You Know Carrots? Here's the Real Dirt

Everybody's favorite root vegetable is a little more mysterious—and a lot more delicious—than you think.

Quick-Pickled Carrots

If you cut your carrots thin enough, you don't have to cook them to make great quick pickles; just pour hot pickling liquid directly over the carrots and let sit. For more visual punch, use multi-colored carrots.

Carrot Pizza With Fontina and Red Onion

Creamy, sweet carrot purée takes the place of tomato sauce in this unexpected spring pizza.

Pan-Seared Carrot Steaks

Applying a classic steak cooking technique to carrots turns them into a satisfying vegetarian main. For the best presentation, use the largest carrots you can find.

Tacos al Pastor

These pineapple and pork tacos are the original fusion food—a cross between Middle Eastern shawarma and the guajillo-rubbed grilled pork served by Mexican street vendors. The pork needs to marinate four hours.

Feta Snack with Spring Radishes

Though good with any fresh vegetable, this sharp, creamy feta dip, smoothed with a little buttermilk, is exceptional with crisp spring radishes. Much as in the combination above, salt and fat mellow any heat from the raw radishes. Cheesemaker Mary Rigdon of Decimal Place Farm has been brining her goat's milk feta to order for us every week since Miller Union opened. If you have a local farmers' market that sells fresh cheeses, look there first for good-quality feta. I love the little pink, purple, or red garden variety radishes for this dip.

Stop with the Garlic Press—Use a Chef's Knife Instead

Don't bother with a food processor or a mortar and pestle. All you need is a sharp chef's knife and some salt—and these three easy steps.

Ragout of Lamb and Spring Vegetables with Farro

This elegant stew can be made up to the point that the farro goes in; cool, then cover and chill up to 2 days.

The Ultimate Bolognese Sauce

Bolognese is a hearty sauce that needs a toothy, wide noodle like fresh pappardelle, or a sturdy dried shape like rigatoni.—Mike Easton

Steakhouse Salad with Red Chile Dressing and Peanuts

The steak can be marinated a day in advance—in fact, it gets better.

Duck Breast With Mustard Greens, Turnips, and Radishes

Planning a spring dinner party? This is the entree you’re going to want to put on your menu.

Pork Shoulder Cutlets with Fennel and Asparagus

A simple spring salad of shaved asparagus and fennel provides the fresh crunch needed to offset rich breaded pork cutlets.
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