5 Ingredients or Fewer
Crème Fraîche and Chive Mashed Potatoes
Use a potato masher—or even just a large fork—if you don't have a ricer.
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Tuna, White Bean, and Red Onion Salad
Thinly sliced red onion adds flavor and color to this light tuna salad.
By Lori De Mori
Sautéed Kale with Garlic, Shallots, and Capers
The slight bitterness of the greens cuts through the richness of the meat and potatoes in this menu. Feel free to use any variety of kale (or a mix of varieties) in this dish. Green, red, or Tuscan kale (sometimes called lacinato or dinosaur kale) would all be delicious. 3 pounds kale (about 4 large bunches), thick bottom stems and center stems cut away and discarded
Glazed Root Vegetables
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Okra with Scallion, Lime, and Ginger
Steaming unlocks the succulence of okra. Here, the pods are tossed with slivered ginger and a Vietnamese-inspired scallion oil in an all-purpose dish that's great with grilled steak or chicken, or with nothing more than a fragrant bowlful of jasmine rice.
By Maggie Ruggiero
Roasted Cauliflower With Kalamata Vinaigrette
Cutting cauliflower into thick, meaty slices, core and all, is a neat trick. So is roasting it, which brings out the best in this vegetable, caramelizing its edges and playing up its nuttiness. A briny olive vinaigrette adds just the right sharp-savory note.
By Melissa Roberts
Japanese Turnips with Miso
The small, round, mild white turnips known colloquially as Japanese turnips are at their most delicious when simply cooked with their greens. A last-minute swirl in miso butter (which is fantastic on pretty much any vegetable) gives them an almost meaty underpinning.
By Maggie Ruggiero
All-Butter Pastry Dough
An all-butter pastry dough is easy to handle. It's a little less flaky than a dough made with a blend of butter and shortening, but you'll love the end result—it tastes marvelous.
By Melissa Roberts
Concord Grape Sorbet (Sorbetto di Uva)
Although uva means "grape" in Italian, Concords are native to North America. A velvety sorbet brings out their inky, foxy intensity. It will, in fact, swing you right into autumn.
By Andrea Albin
Crispy Garlic Chips
The French have a saying, "You must watch what you're cooking like milk on the stove," referring, of course, to the fact that milk can boil over in a flash. Case in point: Garlic chips are sweet and nutty when cooked just right, but let them go just a little too long, and they become burnt and acrid.
By Francis Mallmann
Lemon Ice Cream
By Michael Lata
Greek Yogurt Ice Cream
By Mathew Rice
Individual Carolina Peach Tarte Tatins with Lemon Ice Cream
At FIG, ice cream isn't just for warm weather. In winter you'll find, say, molten chocolate cake paired with pistachio ice cream or maple ice cream atop spiced apple-raisin crumble. Summer in South Carolina means fresh local peaches, and chef Mike Lata puts them to good use in these single-serving tarte Tatins. They're pretty and delicious on their own, but with the addition of the Lemon Ice Cream, they're absolutely sublime.
By Mike Lata
Semolina Gnocchi
These "gnocchi" are more like baked polenta cutouts. For a pretty presentation, cut the gnocchi with a three-inch-square scalloped cookie cutter.
By James Holmes
Chicken-Fat Puff Pastry
If you don't get enough fat from the chicken, supplement with purchased chicken fat (from the freezer section of the supermarket). Go here for pastry-making tips.
By Scott Parker
Heirloom Tomato Salad
By Jonathan Sawyer
Hummus and Crudités
Pack carrot and celery sticks along with this lemony hummus.
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Blueberry Basil Granita
By Jennifer Iserloh
Pumpkin Hazelnut Compote
Especially in northern Turkey where the climate approximates northern coastal United States, pumpkins and pumpkin-like sweet winter squash are grown. Hazelnuts are also grown there, along the Black Sea. They combine well in this dessert.
By Carol Robertson