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Salumi with Grape Mostarda and Whole Wheat Gnocci Fritti
If there isn't a salumi plate, it can't be a modern Italian restaurant. Chef Frank Bonanno at the Osteria Marco in Denver takes the trend one step further, adding house-made relish and fluffy fried dough.
By Frank Bonanno
Lobster Salad with Fresh Mint and Lime
Coconut milk adds surprising body and richness to the mint-lime mixture. If desired, reserve the lobster shells for stock.
By Clark Frasier and Mark Gaier
Sautéed Snow Peas, Sugar Snap Peas, and Pea Shoots
This summer side cooks quickly, so the veggies retain their nutrients.
By Anita Lo
Pupu Platter
Polynesian-Style Hors dOeuvres
A blend of crisp, soft, and chewy textures combined with a parade of flavorssweet, salty, beefymakes this playful platter an irresistible hit at parties.
Grilled Shrimp with Spicy Tamarind Dipping Sauce
This shrimp appetizer almost has the iron of steak but far fewer calories.
By Anita Lo
Nopales & Green Beet Salad
For the best flavor, choose small- to medium-sized beets that are firm. Just before cooking, wash beets gently so as not to pierce the skin, which would result in the loss of color and nutrients. Peel the beets after they are cooked and cooled. The skin comes off very easily.
Nopales, or fresh cactus, is the fleshy, paddle-shaped stem of the prickly pear cactus. All varieties of prickly pear are edible, but it is best to look for a medium-sized variety that is relatively spineless (this is probably what you would get in the United States anyway). What we see growing in the southwestern part of the United States are generally thick-skinned, low-growing varieties that are not particularly tasty. Nopales are very common in Mexico and are beginning to have more of a presence in the States, as they are very healthy.
By Susan Curtis and Nicole Curtis Ammerman
Jalapeño Poppers
A double layer of bread crumbs is the key to these extra-crispy homemade bar snacks.
By Ian Knauer
Cobb Salad with Warm Bacon Vinaigrette
By Andrea Albin
Green Tomato and Honeydew Melon Salad
A stylish symphony in green, this dish has a heady bouquet to match. The tart tomatoes and sweet melon are the stars, but the supporting players—hot jalapeño, earthy pumpkin seeds, and pungent cilantro—add plenty of intrigue.
By Paul Grimes
Grilled Rainbow Chard with Fava Beans and Oregano
The stems of Swiss chard get short shrift way too often; when they're beautiful rainbow chard, they deserve a dish all their own. Blanched to remove toughness, then grilled—yes, we like our chard charred—their earthiness is a natural complement to meaty fava beans.
Chilled Soba with Tofu and Sugar Snap Peas
A bowl of these refreshing noodles—a riff on a Japanese classic that gets topped with silky tofu—is clean and light, yet still hearty enough to make a satisfying meal.
By Lillian Chou
Roasted Red Peppers and Cauliflower with Caper Vinaigrette
A zesty lemon, olive oil, and caper dressing brings out the best in nutty roasted cauliflower and sweet red peppers.
By Shelley Wiseman
Sherry Tomato Granita
Think of this marvelous first course as a savory sundae, with a pretty salad of crunchy julienned vegetables topping the icy granita. Cream Sherry adds a sweet base note to the granita, while the sharpness of Sherry vinegar accentuates the tomatoes' acidity.
By Paul Grimes
Heirloom Tomato Terrine
Using his artist's eye, food editor and stylist Paul Grimes transformed the usual free-form summer tomato salad into a showstopping terrine with structure and elegance. A homemade vegetable broth is the base for the delicate aspic in which the curves of tomato, arranged by color, are suspended.
By Paul Grimes
Pork and Chive Dumplings
These dumplings are the most succulent we've ever had. The secret is in the quality of the meat: Reusing uses locally raised heritage breeds such as Berkshire or Ossabaw, but any free-range pork will have enough fat and flavor to make a difference.
By Andrea Reusing
Cold Spicy Celery
You need something clean and refreshing in the series of "small plates," like this one and those above, and Reusings celery preparation fits the bill perfectly.
By Andrea Reusing
Caviar Eggs
Laden with suitcases full of caviar, a thank-you gift from the Shah of Iran for cooking at his palace in 1978, Louis Outhier returned to France in need of a recipe that called for such extravagance. Oeufs au caviar was the result, and Jean-Georges Vongerichten, Outhier's young protégé at the time, still serves the dish at his namesake New York City restaurant. Layered inside an eggshell, warm scrambled eggs and cold cream are accented with a regal dollop of caviar.
By Louis Outheir
Parmesan-Pepper Biscuits
By Ian Knauer
Mushroom Consomme with Morels and Pastry "Hats"
Paul Bocuse believes a great chef will invent only two dishes in his entire career; his own truffle soup with pastry "hats" will forever be known as his signature creation. Our version retains all the theater of the billowy dome of puff pastry and the richness of the flavors but substitutes mushroom consommé laced with morels and snips of fresh chives for the opulence of truffles and foie gras.
By Paul Bocuse