Nut Free
Skillet Stuffing With Apples, Shallots, and Cranberries
Cooking your stuffing in an ovenproof skillet means it can go from stove to oven without missing a beat. Prepping your aromatic vegetables in the food processor cuts down on chopping time, too.
By Leah Koenig
Chocolate-Cinnamon “Babkallah”
Introducing our test kitchen's hybrid baby: It's braided like a challah for maximum babka-y chocolate swirl in every bite.
By Claire SaffitzPhotography by Peden + Munk
Smoked Turkey with Hot Pepper Jelly Glaze
Smoking a whole turkey is little more work than roasting a bird, but it infuses the meat with a rich, woodsy flavor. All it requires is setting up a grill. Once that's done, the turkey's good to go—all it needs is a simple glaze made from hot-pepper jelly. The final glaze caramelizes on the skin and adds a sweet and sour heat to the smoky turkey.
By Elizabeth Karmel
Butterflied Turkey a la Parrilla with Chanterelles and Grilled Chicory
A grilled split turkey, golden brown as it comes from the parrilla, is one of my favorite dishes. Salt and pepper are all it needs. Such a simple preparation wants an equally uncomplicated but flavorful side dish. Chicory, which I learned to love when I worked in Italy as a young man, does the trick for me every time. Brushed with olive oil, seasoned with salt and pepper, and grilled to crispness, it is as good as the turkey that it graces. If you are lucky enough to have acquired some chanterelles or other wild mushrooms to sauté, they make the crowning touch. Their color is like the caramelized crust of the chicken.
I butterfly my turkeys differently than most butchers: I split them through the breastbone instead of the back, leaving the backbone in instead of discarding it. I think you get a juicier turkey this way, and an extra fun bone to pick.
By Francis Mallmann
Duck-Fat Turkey Breasts with Green Onion Puree
Chef Sean Brock created this dish using quail, but the technique pairs equally well with bone-in turkey breast, creating a surprisingly juicy version of a much-maligned cut. Searing a turkey breast on the stovetop crisps the skin beautifully, while basting with thyme- and garlic-scented duck fat enriches the lean meat. Green onions stand in for the green garlic for a silky, fresh sauce that's a welcome departure from classic gravy. Be sure to use homemade vegetable stock or a clear canned stock to preserve the brilliant green color. You can find duck fat from many gourmet shops, or online from D'Artagnan.
By Sean Brock
Thomas Keller’s Favorite Roast Turkey
Beloved for a reason, this bird is brined and then air-dried in the refrigerator for the crispiest, most flavorsome turkey skin ever.
By Thomas Keller
Apple, Pear, and Cranberry Coffee Cake
We like to bake with a combination of apples: some sweet and some tart, some that keep their shape and others that will break down and get saucy. Adding the pear lends a perfumey quality to the cake.
By Jeff Hertzberg, M.D. and Zoë François
Buckwheat Linzer Cookies
These pretty cookies look as though they are fussy to make, but they are actually slice-and-bake cookies, with holes cut from half of them about halfway through the baking. Buckwheat pairs well with any dark berry or cherry flavor, so feel free to try different preserves. The cookies keep well, but they should be assembled only shortly before serving. Leftover filled cookies will soften a bit, but they will still taste great.
By Alice Medrich
Buckwheat Sablés
By Alice Medrich
Wild Mushroom Polenta with Porcini Sauce
By Diana Yen
Blue Cheese, Apple, and Sage-Honey Crostini
By Diana Yen
Beet-Pickled Deviled Eggs
These vibrant, savory, and slightly spicy deviled eggs are perfect for parties, but easy enough to make as a snack, too.
By Ian Knauer
Spinach-Avocado Smoothie with Grapefruit
The classic combination of spinach, avocado, and grapefruit inspired this fresh, vitamin-packed smoothie. With green tea and protein powder, its all you need to get going in the morning.
By Rhoda Boone
Black Bottom Oatmeal Pie
A filling of bittersweet chocolate, dark corn syrup, and rolled oats make this a rich, delicious pie.
By Emily Elsen and Melissa Elsen
Pan-Roasted Carrots with Miso-Butter
By Sue Li
Tea-Brined Buttermilk Fried Chicken and Gravy
I've worked on my fried chicken for many years, researching every recipe that I could lay my hands on, from early antebellum instructions to the Kentucky Colonel's secret technique. This recipe uses five fats, and each one contributes to the flavor of the result.
To do the chicken right, you need an old black cast-iron skillet with a lid. Sure, you can make it in a deep fryer (like we do at the restaurant), but I prefer the old-fashioned way, which is nearly impossible to pull off in a restaurant. The skillets take up so much stove space that you can't make more than ten orders at a time. So this isn't the fried chicken you're going to eat at Husk. This is the way grandmas cook fried chicken in the South, and it's the way everyone should be making fried chicken at home.
This recipe takes a lot of time and attention, way more than most conventional approaches (the chicken must be brined for 12 hours, so plan ahead). But it's good. Be sure to ask your butcher for the chicken skins to render for fat and to save the cooking fat, which makes mighty fine gravy. I've thrown that recipe in here too, to complete the meal just like my grandma would have.
By Sean Brock
Gravy
By Sean Brock
Peking-Style Roast Turkey with Molasses-Soy Glaze and Orange-Ginger Gravy
Steaming might seem a surprising way to start cooking a turkey, but the payoff is real: The extra step makes the bird extra-juicy, and cuts down on the overall cooking time.
By Sue Li
Sweet Potato and Caramelized Onion Hash with Baked Eggs
Prep the savory hash and refrigerate in individual ramekins for a quick and
easy breakfast; just top with an egg and bake.
By Sara Kate Gillingham and Faith Durand