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Easy

Barbecue Turkey Sandwich

Use leftover biscuits and any bottled barbecue sauce for this creation.

Root Vegetable Gratin

The key to gratins is having all the ingredients—whether they're basic potatoes or the mixed root vegetables below—sliced the same thickness so they cook at the same rate. Make friends with a mandoline: It quickly yields precise, even slices.

Turkey Panino with Cranberry Sauce

Transform leftover turkey into the ultimate grilled cheese.

Ginger-Marinated Hanger Steak

Get your pan nice and hot. If you have a cast-iron skillet, now's the time to use it.

Carrot-Coconut Soup

If you like things extra spicy, pass some chili sauce at the table.

Black Bean Soup with Roasted Poblano Chiles

Choose dried chiles that are fairly flexible, a sign they're not too old.

Spiced Black Lentils with Yogurt and Mint

Aptly named beluga lentils look like little beads of caviar. They cook quickly, and they hold their shape.

Scallion Fish with Sesame Kale

If you don't have a steamer basket, improvise: Place a ramekin in the bottom of the pot and prop a dinner plate on top so steam can circulate around it.

Roasted Cauliflower with Lemon-Parsley Dressing

This side dish is equally good with steak, broiled fish, or seared lamb chops.

Johnnycake Bread

We recommend using finely ground cornmeal to give these the ideal texture.

Lahmacun

This thin, crisp Turkish flatbread is typically rolled into a cone before eating.

Classic Dressing

This recipe is ripe for reinvention; use different breads and add-ins to vary the flavor.

Turnips with Bacon and Pickled Mustard Seeds

Diminutive and sweet hakurei turnips are in season and perfect for this dish; find them at farmers' markets.

Pumpkin Spoon Bread

We make lots of things from scratch on Thanksgiving, but pumpkin purée isn't one of them.

Pickled Red Onions

Vegan (when made with agave nectar or sugar) This trick will alter and augment your cooking: Pour boiling water over sliced or diced red onions, then transfer them to a solution of vinegar, sweetener, and salt. The onions will brighten into a gaudy shade of purplish-pink and will keep indefinitely, mysteriously retaining their bright color and crisp texture. rather than slice, the onions, if they are headed for one of the cold soups.) You can vary the cut of the onions—and also the amounts of sweet and salt. Use as a dramatically colorful and refreshing tiara atop dinner plates, open-faced sandwiches, salads, cheeses, grilled tofu, or fish—anything savory. I use these often as an ingredient in cold soups and saladitas. (Mince, rather than slice, the onions, if they are headed for one of the cold soups.) • Use a very sharp knife or a food processor with a thin slicing attachment to cut the onions most easily.

Coconut-Mango Rice Noodle Salad

Vegan Green beans, cashews, mint, carrot, cucumber, and lime shine through the pearly noodles in this pretty, uplifting dish. The noodles will seem undercooked at first, but they will soften as they absorb the marinade and the moisture from the other ingredients. If you cook them all the way, the finished dish will be mushy. • Rice noodles of various thickness can be purchased inexpensively in most Asian-themed grocery stores, some supermarkets, and online. Use medium-thin ones for this recipe. • You can freeze the unused coconut milk in an ice cube tray, then transfer the cubes to a heavy plastic zip-style bag for making this (or something else) in the future. Don't forget to label the bag. • This tastes best within a few hours of being assembled, so plan accordingly. • Make sure the cucumber is sweet.

Seasonal Fruit–Herb Saladitas

Vegan The simplest saladitas in my repertoire are the ones that pair a single fruit with just one fresh herb. These are as flexible as they are easy. Extra-virgin olive oil, fresh lemon or lime juice, and salt and pepper are all optional. A small pile of Pickled Red Onions is always welcome on top. Make these shortly before serving.
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