Make Ahead
Chanterelle Mushroom Gravy
Editor's note: Serve this gravy with Diane Morgan's Juniper-Brined Roast Turkey
This gravy can be made while the turkey roasts. If chanterelle mushrooms are not available, substitute other fresh wild mushrooms, use cremini mushrooms, or buy dried chanterelle mushrooms and soak them in warm water to rehydrate before adding to the gravy. If you are serving a few vegetarians for Thanksgiving, you could make an additional half-recipe of this gravy using a rich homemade or canned vegetable broth.
By Diane Morgan
Adobo-Glazed Mini Turkey Loaves
By Wendy Giman
Slow-Baked Honeycrisp Apples
A relatively new variety, Honeycrisps have a sweet, mellow flavor. They're very juicy, and when baked long and slow, their juices bubble and caramelize. These baked apples are best served slightly warm, but they are also great served cold for breakfast the next morning, topped with a dollop of yogurt. A V-slicer makes quick work of slicing the apples, but if you don't have one, a sharp sturdy knife will do the trick.
By Dorie Greenspan
Chocolate Stout Layer Cake with Chocolate Frosting
Forget milk—stout is the perfect pairing for this cake. Serve glasses of the same brew you used in the cake batter. Take it up a notch by adding a scoop or two of vanilla ice cream to the beer for a grown-up float.
By Bruce Aidells
Fuji Apple Spice Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
Why Fujis? This not-too-sugary cake (inspired by carrot cake) is best when made with fairly sweet apples. Plus, it's important to choose an apple variety with a sturdy structure so that it won't break down during baking. Fuji apples fill the bill on both counts.
By Dorie Greenspan
Lamb and Cabbage Stew with Fresh Shell Beans
This North African-inspired stew is lighter than traditional stews because there's less meat and more vegetables. Shell beans add to the brightness and freshness of the dish. Start the stew a day in advance—the lamb needs to marinate overnight.
By Molly Stevens
Beer and Horseradish Mustard
The hit of beer in this tangy mustard makes it the perfect dipping sauce for the sausages.
By Bruce Aidells
Brisket Braised in Porter
The brisket tastes best if prepared ahead, so make it at least one day and up to two days before you plan to serve it. Chilling the brisket makes it easier to slice. Rewarm the meat in the sauce and serve with a full-flavored dark beer (see our suggestions below).
By Bruce Aidells
Beef Stock
Beef, veal, and pork bones are hard to come by, so ask your butcher to save any he removes for you. Take them home and freeze them for later use in stock. These days, the scarcest of beef products has to be the bones! In the old days, the butcher had plenty of bones to spare, but today's precut meat means fewer bones at the retail level.
By Stanley Lobel , Evan Lobel , Mark Lobel , David Lobel, Mary Goodbody, and David Whiteman
Monster Eyeballs
Use miniature M&Ms (green are fun) to make the irises in these monster eyes and begin with very soft butter, or the ingredients will be difficult to blend. Mound the eyeballs into a bowl for serving, or lay them out on a tray in row after unblinking row.
By Sharon Bowers
Vidalia Onion Tart with Bacon, Local Honey, and Fresh Thyme
The official vegetable of Georgia since 1990, the sweet, mild Vidalia onion is recognized worldwide for its gentle flavor. However, Vidalias can only be grown in a 20-county production area in and around Vidalia, Georgia, to legally wear the Vidalia label. Because of their thin, tender skins and relatively high sugar content, Vidalia onions are more perishable than most and need to be consumed within about one week of purchase. Look for Georgia-grown Vidalias at farmers markets around the Southeast in early spring through the summer.
Although a regular white sweet spring onion would make a fine substitute, Vidalia's signature sweetness is gorgeous with the saltiness of bacon and the mild, lemony bite of fresh thyme in this savory tart. Serve with a salad and you've got a meal to remember. If you want to bypass making tart pastry, go ahead and buy prepared pastry at the grocery.
By Holly Herrick
The Three Amigos
This zesty salad is big on beans and packs plenty of protein and vitamins!
By Hilary Shevlin Karmilowicz
Thai Chile-Herb Dipping Sauce
By Stanley Lobel , Evan Lobel , Mark Lobel , David Lobel, Mary Goodbody, and David Whiteman
Persian Cucumber and Purple Rice Salad
Juicy, crunchy cucumbers lighten the starch in a rice salad, and lemony coriander accentuates the citrus in the vinaigrette. So-called Persian cukes seem especially beautiful against a background of exotic purple jasmine rice. This is a party dish for which, no doubt, you will become justly famous.
By Andrea Albin
Lemon Verbena and Summer Fruit Gelée
Brush against a lemon verbena plant and its long, narrow leaves will release a transcendently clean, lemony scent. A little of the herb goes a long way, and it plays well with both ripe summer fruit and the light dryness of rosé. All the elements come together here in a suave gelée.
By Andrea Albin
Minted Mackerel and Mushroom Escabeche
Mint gives sprightliness to robust mackerel and mushrooms in a quick escabeche that manages to be both substantial and refreshing.
By Maggie Ruggiero
Bedouin Salsa
While the restaurant serves the ultra-spicy salsa alongside hummus, tsatsiki, and baba ghanouj, chef Eric Leyden suggests it as a lively accompaniment to meats and hearty lentil or tomato soups.
Broccoli Garlic Quiche
Quiche became a classic for a very good reason—its creamy, tender custard is as seductive as it is satisfying. Here, deep-colored broccoli boosts the drama quotient for brunch, lunch, or supper.
By Melissa Roberts
All-Butter Pastry Dough
An all-butter pastry dough is easy to handle. It's a little less flaky than a dough made with a blend of butter and shortening, but you'll love the end result—it tastes marvelous.
By Melissa Roberts
Poppy Seed Pound Cake with Plum Pluot Compote
Plums and pluots—a hybrid that blends the color of plums with the flavor and soft texture of apricots—have a natural tartness that flatters the accompanying pound cake (which tastes even better if made a couple of days ahead).
By Andrea Albin