Dutch Oven
Hearty Rutabaga, Turnip, and Carrot Soup
For a simple dinner, present this flavorful soup with some warm crusty bread and a mixed green salad.
Pumpkin Soup with Honey and Cloves
Swirl a little cream decoratively into each bowl of soup for an elegant presentation.
Irish Stew
There must be as many versions of this—Ireland's national dish—as there are cooks. One thing all recipes should say is that the stew is to be cooked slowly until the lamb is meltingly tender. This stew is the ideal dish to return to after a day in the open air, as it can be made ahead and reheated while cook and guests enjoy the hot punch.
Lamb with Peas and Tomatoes
By Mary Alberghetti
Pecan-Crusted Trout with Orange-Rosemary Butter Sauce
At the fish market, ask them to remove the head, tail and bones from the trout, then to cut each trout into two fillets, leaving the skin intact.
Hearty Lentil Soup with Bacon and Herbs
We adapted this recipe from one by Terrance Brennan, the chef-owner of Picholine restaurant in New York. He tops the soup with strips of smoked salmon.
Smoked Ham Hock Hominy Stew
Serve this dish with cornbread and a mixed green salad for a hearty supper.
Sausages and Pork Chops Baked with Fruited Sauerkraut
Transforming cabbage into sauerkraut was one way the Germans preserved summer's crop for the hard winter ahead. A combination of rinsing the kraut of its salty brine and baking it with dried fruit mellows its bite. Smoked pork chops can be substituted; just omit the browning step. Offer some dark and light German beers to drink.
West Indian Beef Stew
Naomi Wagman Kirstein of Danvers, Massachusetts, writes: "I would love to have the recipe for the West Indian beef stew served at The Golden Lemon Inn & Villas on St. Kitts, in the West Indies."
The green olives in this recipe cut the richness of the stew by adding a slightly pungent flavor.<
Irish "Bacon" and Cabbage
The pork is marinated overnight in a salt-water brine, making it tender and flavorful. After marinating, the pork can be cooked a day ahead so that St. Patrick's Day, which falls on a Monday this year, will be stress-free.
Chicken Scarpariella
The origin of this dish is unknown, but it's a common menu feature of many Italo-American restaurants of the red-sauce variety. In kitchen lingo, a shoemaker is a shortcutting, skillful hack; a shoemaker cobbles things, a meal, together from the meager things on hand. In Italian, scarpa translates as "shoe" and scarpariella is slang for shoemaker. The actual name for one who plies this trade is calzolaio.
In Chicken Scarpariella, a spring chicken is "hacked" up in to small pieces and quickly cooked with a few common ingredients.
By Michael Lomonaco
Tagine Bil Kok
The Centre de Formation en Restauration Traditionnelle, a government-sponsored cooking school in Rabat, is dedicated to preserving the art of traditional Moroccan gastronomy. The students, all young women, will go on to staff Morocco's embassies and consulates around the world. This classic tagine recipe, given to me by the Centre's former director, Monsieur Tamer, is part of the school's delectable curriculum.
By Kitty Morse
Lamb and White Bean Stew with Spinach, Parsley, and Dill
This unusual Iranian stew is served hot at the table from the casserole in which it has been cooked. The lid is lifted, and the delicious aromas of rich tender lamb, fresh herbs, spinach and beans fill the room. Serve with rice or orzo.
By Sheryl London and Mel London
Baked Chicken with Tangy Barbecue Sauce
For this robust and easy entrée, chicken is baked with a barbecue-style glaze. Removing the skin cuts back on fat.
By Idelle Levey
Sicilian "drowned" Broccoli
Broccoli is called sparaceddi in Sicilian. In this side dish, it is "drowned" in a heady mixture of olive oil, onions, anchovies, olives, red wine and cheese. While there are variations of the basic preparation throughout Italy, food historians generally think it to be of Sicilian origin.
Mushroom Barley Soup
By Tony Litwinko