Author: Moira Hodgson
Author: Pierre Franey
Author: Barbara Kafka
This salad, which was featured in a Times article about Yotam Ottolenghi, was adapted from "Plenty," his first cookbook. It is rich with vegetables and fresh herbs, and is dead simple to make. The salad...
Author: Ligaya Mishan
Author: Moira Hodgson
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Pierre Franey
Author: Marian Burros
This piquant chicken dish was brought to The Times in 1993 by the legendary French chef, Jacques Pépin. It is made with chicken legs that are skinned and then cooked with lemon and orange peels, fresh...
Author: Jacques Pepin
Author: Moira Hodgson
It took a few tries, but I finally came up with what I'd call "smoke kissed" ribs in my oven. I started with a dry rub; it's the same one I use every summer, based on a recipe my friend Chris Schlesinger...
Author: Mark Bittman
Author: Marian Burros
The simplest way to keep white-meat chicken moist and make it flavorful is to put fat and flavor inside - to stuff it. Here is a chicken-cutlet take on negimaki, the Japanese dish of thinly sliced beef...
Author: Mark Bittman
Author: Moira Hodgson
Author: Moira Hodgson
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Amanda Hesser
Author: Pierre Franey
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Amanda Hesser
Author: Pierre Franey
Grilling fish is not daunting when you master a few details, like selecting the right type of fish, keeping your grill clean and - the moment of truth - knowing how to turn. A whole fish can simply be...
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Marian Burros
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Molly O'Neill
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Molly O'Neill
Author: Bryan Miller
This is a dish inspired by the classic Portuguese pork with clams (usually called á alentejana, because it's from Alentejo), a magnificent expression of surf and turf, with the brininess of the clams...
Author: Mark Bittman
Author: Nancy Harmon Jenkins
Any food historian will tell you that trying to track down the origin of a recipe is like chasing tadpoles. There are so many and they all look alike. One thing is clear, though: a good recipe has a thousand...
Author: Amanda Hesser
Author: Moira Hodgson
This complexly flavored, multitextured, slightly sweet dish of mussels is an elegant meal that can easily be doubled for a dinner party.
Author: Melissa Clark
I had never cooked ong choy, also known as water spinach, until experimenting with this stir-fry. The hollow stems require a little more time to cook than the leaves so they are added first to the wok....
Author: Martha Rose Shulman
Author: Moira Hodgson
Author: Mark Bittman
Author: Marian Burros
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Pierre Franey
Author: Pierre Franey
Author: Florence Fabricant
Author: Molly O'Neill
Author: Mark Bittman
Author: Pierre Franey
Author: Jonathan Reynolds
No matter if you broil, pan-sear or grill it, like most economical cuts, London broils want to stay rare and juicy and a little chewy to show off its best side. Cooked through until completely brown, these...
Author: Melissa Clark
Author: Moira Hodgson
Author: Marian Burros
Author: Aljean Harmetz