Garlic
Garlic Dijon Skirt Steak
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Garlic Shrimp
Shrimp in a garlicky sauce is a classic— and a classically simple— Spanish tapa. It is usually cooked and presented in individual shallow earthenware casseroles, but it can just as easily be made in a larger casserole or skillet. Offer crusty bread alongside.
Chilled Avocado Cucumber Soup
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Roast Veal Brisket with Marsala-Mushroom Sauce
This hearty winter entrée can be prepared several days ahead. Veal brisket is the boned veal breast. If you don't have a roasting pan large enough to hold both briskets, divide the ingredients in half and bake in two pans. If the veal is difficult to find, substitute one 5-pound flat-cut beef brisket and roast until tender, about 3 1/2 hours. Leftovers freeze well and make great sandwiches.
Baked Fish with Curried Pecan Topping
This dish comes together quickly, making it ideal for a weeknight dinner. Just add some steamed rice or sauté baby potatoes and a tossed green salad
Watercress Potato Soup
Excellent served cold in summer, the soup also makes a soothing hot starter during the colder months.
Chive Dressing
Use this versatile sauce as a dip for crudités, a dressing for cold fish or chicken, and as a substitute for mayonnaise. Tofu makes it virtually fat-free.
Green Salad with Oil and Vinegar Dressing (Salade Verte à la Vinaigrette)
(Salade Verte à la Vinaigrette)
This is a basic recipe, one that should be part of every culinary repertoire. On the farm it is an everyday salad that changes according to the season, depending on what greens are fresh in the garden.
In winter I am a slave to escarole, which I occasionally combine with Belgian endive. In spring and summer I mix greens, using green or red oak-leaf, mesclun (a fragrant mix of young greens), arugula, and fresh herbs.
Green Noodles with Garlic
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
A Nineties Twist to a Grandmother's Roast Chicken
My grandmother made a great Friday night dinner in her two-story limestone in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. She might as well have run a restaurant. There was lots and lots and lots of stuff—kreplach, gribenes, gefilte fish, blintzes, homemade noodles, roast chicken, glazed carrots, egg barley with dried Polish mushrooms. In 1918 during an influenza epidemic my grandmother was 20 years old with two children. First her husband died and two days later her mother died. With eight younger siblings and two of her own, she took care of ten kids in the family. Then an aunt caught the flu and died leaving eight or nine children. My grandmother then married her uncle and raised 18 kids.
The secret to her roast chicken was to cook it long enough to render the fat from the chicken and make it crispy.
—Eddie Schoenfeld, New York restaurateur
Baked Artichokes with Crab and Sourdough Stuffing
Artichokes, an Old World food, came to America with Italian immigrants and found a happy home in the near-Mediterranean climate of California. As "ethnic" fare, artichokes took their time catching on outside the Golden State. They finally did in the thirties and became something of a fad. Artichokes were not limited to the vegetable course, either. Sometimes the center "choke" was scooped out and the hollow filled with a stuffing for a fashionable light lunch entrée.
Watercress and Belgian Endive Salad
Salade de Cresson et Endive
Active time: 10 min Start to finish: 10 min
Szechuan Noodles with Peanut Sauce
This chilled noodle salad from Zygot Bookworks & Cafe is loaded with crisp vegetables.
Brandade de Saumon
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Spinach- and Cheese- Stuffed Pasta Shells
Fennel seeds add a flavorful new twist to this vegetarian main course.
Sauteed Mustard Greens with Garlic
If using young, small mustard greens, simply stir-fry as directed, omitting the water and additional cooking time.