5 Ingredients or Fewer
Crab and Celery Remoulade
By Tori Ritchie
Chicken with Roasted Grapes and Shallots
This is an incredibly simple recipe with an impressive payoff: Golden roasted chicken is dressed up with beautiful bunches of sweet grapes.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Halibut with Clementine Gremolata
Gremolata is an Italian garnish traditionally made with finely chopped parsley, garlic, and lemon zest. Clementines add intriguing flavor, and the green gremolata looks beautiful against the white fish.
By Lora Zarubin
Candied Lemon Peel
The soft, tender lemon peel adds a sweet-tangy note to the lacy florentines.
By Dédé Wilson
Butternut Squash Puree
This nutty, satisfying puree— enriched with chicken fat for tradition's sake or pareve margarine—makes a nice bed for the roast duck.
By Selma Brown Morrow
Watercress Guacamole
By Selma Brown Morrow
Clementine Negroni
Clementines provide the orange flavoring in this update of a classic cocktail. Chill the Martini glasses in the freezer for a few hours beforehand. Hendricks Gin, a smooth Scottish gin infused with cucumber and rose petals, is worth seeking out: It is the perfect choice for this drink.
By Lora Zarubin
Roasted Salt-and Spice-Packed Pork Loin
Roasting the pork at a low temperature in a spiced salt mixture amps up the flavor of the meat and makes it extra-tender. After cooking the pork, the rack of bones is cut off and used to hold the roast for easy carving.
By Gabrielle Hamilton
Roasted Carrot, Parsnip, and Potato Coins
Look for carrots and parsnips that are about two inches in diameter at their thickest point; you don't want them to be too big or too slender.
By Tori Ritchie
Fresh Herb, Grapefruit, and Fennel Salad
Paper-thin slices of fennel, juicy grapefruit segments, and fresh parsley and mint make a beautiful winter salad. Using a V-slicer to cut the fennel helps the easy side dish come together even more quickly.
By Gabrielle Hamilton
Maple-Glazed Tuna with Pear-Potato Salad
I met twelve-year-old Frank Liranzo when I was teaching a kids' cooking class at the YMCA's environmental camp in Huguenot, New York. The kids learned how to tap trees to make maple syrup, a process I'd read about but never seen in action. Frank was one of the campers, and he got to experience firsthand the old art of making maple syrup. "You put tubes into the trees so the sap flows out," he says. "When it first comes out of the tree, it tastes like sugary water. Then we went to the sugar shack where we saw the sap boiled down until it tasted like syrup." At the camp, I made this Maple-Glazed Tuna with Pear-Potato Salad for the kids. "I thought it would taste really sugary, but it didn't," Frank told me. "First I tasted the fish, then a hint of mustard, and then an aftertaste of the maple syrup." I love how the syrup adds sweetness and a beautiful caramelized crust to the meaty tuna steaks, while the sweetness of the pears in the accompanying potato salad balances nicely with the glazed tuna.
By Marcus Samuelsson
Maple Pecan Popcorn
What could be more American than candy corn? Try maple pecan popcorn treats, for starters. They're made with three ingredients—maple syrup, pecans, and popcorn—that originated in the New World.
By Melissa Roberts
Potato Ghosts
You and your guests will be utterly charmed when you see how easily mashed potatoes can be transformed into a gaggle of ghosts. Simply form them into pointy mounds and then personify—no, make that "ghostify"—them with seed "eyes." Don't be surprised if these become a new family must-have for Halloweens to come.
By Kemp Minifie
Tomato and Green Chili Quesadillas or Soft Tacos
Highlighting the flavor of green chilies and fresh tomatoes, these quesadillas or tacos make a great warm-weather meal.
By Nava Atlas
Asparagus Velouté
By Joel Robuchon
Limoncello Tiramisù
One of the delights of making tiramisù is its versatility. This recipe makes a family-style dessert in a large dish, but you can easily compose single servings in dessert glasses, wine goblets, or even elegant teacups for a more impressive presentation, in the style of Signora Garatti's original "coppa imperiale." And while the conventional version of tiramisù calls for espresso soaked savoiardi, I've found that other flavors can be incorporated into the dessert with great success. Here, the brightness of fresh lemons and limoncello liqueur lace the cream and soaking syrup to make for a tiramisù that is refreshing and irresistible.
By Lidia Bastianich
Noodles with Stir-Fried Tofu and Broccoli
Look for Asian noodles in natural foods stores as well as in the Asian foods section of well-stocked supermarkets.
By Nava Atlas
Salad of Dandelion Greens with Almond Vinaigrette and Dried Ricotta
We found the greens for this salad by foraging in the woods and fields. You can forage farmers’ markets for tender young dandelion greens, purslane, wild fennel, and pea shoots to make a tasty salad. Even your refrigerator or kitchen garden might yield some goodies, like chives, tender young Italian parsley, thinly sliced red cabbage, or the yellow leaves from celery hearts.
By Lidia Bastianich
Sausages with Potatoes and Hot Peppers
This zesty dish is suitable for all sorts of occasions. As a first course, it will turn an ordinary meal into a festive occasion. It’s also a great main course for a family dinner, with a salad and pasta. Heap the sausages and potatoes on a big platter, and let people help themselves.
By Lidia Bastianich
Clam Stew with Potatoes and Parsley Puree
This is essentially a clam chowder but one that is less soupy, more colorful, and more “clammy” than most. The departures from American tradition include a strong whiff of garlic and a bright green puree of parsley.
By Mark Bittman