Make Ahead
Ikarian Vegetable Medley
It may appear very oily at first, but this dish comes together in the end without being the least bit heavy. We realize that not everyone will have 3 colanders on hand. You can also toss the vegetables with salt and let them drain in large bowls.
By Diane Kochilas
Arctic Char Gravlaks with Cucumber Jelly
Gravlaks — fish cured with salt, sugar, and dill — is usually made with salmon, but we like the milder flavor of arctic char for this particular dish.
Keep in mind before starting to cure your fish that you will need to turn it every 12 hours for a total of 36 hours.
Buttermilk Cornbread with Monterey Jack Cheese
This cornbread is a little firmer and denser than one made for eating on its own so that it will hold up to grilling and tossing with the dressing for the Grilled Cornbread Salad with Red Onions, Arugula, and Red Wine Vinaigrette.
By Tom Douglas
Triple-Chocolate Cookies
By Tom Douglas
Triple-Chocolate Cookie and Strawberry Ice Cream Sandwiches
Bake and freeze the Triple-Chocolate Cookies a day before filling them with ice cream. For convenience, you can make the homemade ice cream up to three days in advance. Purchased strawberry ice cream (softened slightly at room temperature until spreadable) also works in these sandwiches.
By Tom Douglas
Sweet-Potato Salad with Spicy Peanut Dressing
Great with: Grilled hoisin-glazed ribs, pork chops, or chicken satay.
Chopped Honey-Mustard Slaw
By Tom Douglas
Berry Rum Punch
A fresh raspberry syrup infuses this pretty drink with bright fruit flavor.
By Tom Douglas
Homemade Ginger Beer
Homemade ginger beer is concentrated, dry, and noncarbonated, making it ideal for mixing directly into cocktails.
The ginger beer's appearance will be cloudy; this is natural.
By Audrey Saunders
Simply Strawberry Sorbet
Editor's note: This recipe is adapted from Gabrielle Carbone, coproprietor of The Bent Spoon ice cream parlor in Princeton, New Jersey.
My husband Matt and I created this recipe long before we opened The Bent Spoon. We have such special memories of picking baskets full of strawberries and making them into this bright reddish-pink sorbet, which captures their fresh-picked essence. We now use it in the top layer in our red, white, and blue cake.
Because it's such a simple recipe, it's important to get fresh, organic berries picked at the height of their flavor. At the shop, we don't strain them — we like to keep the fruit as close to its natural state as possible. But if you dislike bits of seeds in your sorbet, feel free to strain the base before chilling it.
The quality of the water is important as well — if your water has a bad aftertaste, so will your sorbet — so we recommend using bottled.
The optional egg white helps to stabilize, emulsify, and preserve the texture of the sorbet if you are going to keep it in your freezer for a few days.
By Gabrielle Carbone
Candied Lemon Peels
Editor's note: This recipe is adapted from Gabrielle Carbone, coproprietor of The Bent Spoon ice cream parlor in Princeton, New Jersey.
These peels add a wonderful, bright flavor to our Lemon Ice Cream, but this technique can also be used to make candied lime or grapefruit peel. The recipe can be doubled or tripled to make a bigger batch. Try dipping the peels in bittersweet chocolate for a delicious treat.
Because you'll be eating the peel, it's especially important to use an organic lemon (which won't have been sprayed with pesticides) in this recipe. If you must use a regular lemon, scrub it vigorously to clean the outside as thoroughly as possible.
By Gabrielle Carbone
Simply Blueberry Sorbet
Editor's note: This recipe is adapted from Gabrielle Carbone, coproprietor of The Bent Spoon ice cream parlor in Princeton, New Jersey.
This recipe makes a luscious, blue-purple sorbet that's perfect for our red, white, and blue cake. It's a pretty simple recipe — the quality comes from fresh, organic berries picked at the height of their flavor. The quality of the water is important as well — if your water has a bad aftertaste, so will your sorbet — so we recommend using bottled.
The optional egg white helps to stabilize, emulsify, and preserve the texture of the sorbet if you are going to keep it in your freezer for a few days. Also optional is straining. At the shop, we don't strain — we like to keep the fruit as close to its natural state as possible. But if you dislike bits of seeds in your sorbet, feel free to strain the base before chilling it.
By Gabrielle Carbone
Plum Carpaccio
Simple but elegant, this dessert makes a refreshing finale to dinner on a hot summer evening.
Five-Herb Ice Milk
Feel free to experiment with the combination of herbs in this refreshing dessert — we were surprised to discover that even adding a sprig of something assertive like cilantro or oregano to the mix can be delicious. Serve it with the five-spice cones or topped with fresh berries.
Orange Coeurs à la Crème with Strawberry Raspberry Sauce
You can find the Neufchâtel cheese called for here next to the cream cheese at your supermarket.
Don't be alarmed by the holes in your coeur à la crème molds — they allow liquid to drain out of the bottom so the hearts will be firm enough to hold their shape.