Gluten Free
Strawberries with Chamomile Cream
Berries get a subtle herbal note from tea-infused whipped cream.
By Oliver Strand
Eggy Potato Salad with Pickles
Sweet pickle juice and a mashed consistency give this Southern potato salad, inspired by one at Sally Bell's Kitchen, its character.
By Jenny Rosenstrach and Andy Ward
Tare (Soy Basting Sauce)
By Adam Sachs
Tomales Bay Oysters Rockefellar
Make the filling ahead of time and you'll need only a few minutes to go from shucking to eating.
By Oliver Strand
Vietnamese Ice Coffee
Once you know how much condensed milk you like, pour it directly into the cup or glass before you brew the coffee.
By Andrea Nguyen
Grilled Skirt Steak with Herb Salsa Verde
The secret to this flavorful sauce, which is delicious with almost all grilled meat and fish, is to use any herb that looks good at the market. Just be sure to include parsley: It gives the salsa backbone.
By Oliver Strand
Wild Salmon Crudo
Use only the best quality wild salmon in this raw preparation.
By Melissa Hamilton and Christopher Hirsheimer
Roasted Asparagus and Leek Frittata
A fine choice for a spring menu, although good whenever you can find fresh asparagus, this frittata has an especially nice flavor because the asparagus and leeks are roasted and caramelized before being added. If you like, roast the vegetables a day ahead of time and refrigerate them until ready to use.
By Ron Silver
Poached Wild Salmon with Peas and Morels
Salmon with fresh morels and peas drizzled in cream sauce is a simple seasonal luxury worth indulging in.
By Melissa Hamilton and Christopher Hirsheimer
Peruvian Ceviche
Blending ice cubes into the marinade helps to keep the fish and marinade ice-cold while you're preparing and serving.
By Gaston Acurio
Cucumber and Avocado Salad
Sprinkle salt and sugar on produce like cucumbers, tomatoes, or berries (hold the salt!); let stand for 20-40 minutes. This process, also called maceration, draws out the juices, creating a natural sauce.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Leafy No-Lettuce Salad
There's so much more to leafy greens than lettuce. Here, they're tossed with a light vinaigrette and spooned over sliced stone fruit, nuts, and blue cheese.
By Oliver Strand
Spring Vegetable Sauté
This take on a Roman vignole showcases the best and brightest of the season's bounty.
By Oliver Strand
Frisée, Radicchio, and Fennel Salad With Mustard Vinaigrette
A generous handful of mint leaves adds a tongue-tingling surprise, reinforcing this salad's zesty freshness.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Quinoa and Asparagus Salad with Mimosa Vinaigrette
Quinoa is native to the Andes, not the Middle East, so it was unknown to the Jews fleeing Egypt during biblical times. With the recent rise of quinoa's popularity in the United States, and the fact that it's not a true grain but rather the seed of a broadleaf plant, some circles of Judaism have approved of and welcomed it to the Passover table, while others have not. If you feel comfortable serving it this Passover, you will love how it absorbs the vinaigrette, bright with lemon and enriched with finely grated hard-boiled eggs, and how it forms a tender bed for the ribbons of scallion and raw asparagus.
Editor's Note: This recipe is part of Gourmet's Modern Menu for Passover. Menu also includes Wine-Braised Brisket with Tart Cherries and Amaretto Olive Oil Cake.
By Melissa Roberts
Wine-Braised Brisket with Tart Cherries
Beef brisket is the centerpiece of many Jewish holiday meals, particularly at Passover, and every family has their favorite way of preparing it. There are countless recipes out there, but how many do you need besides your grandmother's? At least one more: This one!
Why? Because the meat is slowly braised in Pinot Noir, and the cherry notes in the wine pair brilliantly with dried tart cherries, which plump up with winey beef juices to become little mini-pouches of flavor on their own. Add to that a bit of star anise, which perfumes the brisket and your home with an exotic and enticing hint of licorice. Season the mixture with the sweet-and-sour agrodolce dance of brown sugar and balsamic vinegar, and you have a brisket that is at once counterintuitively familiar and wonderfully different. Like all braised meats, brisket improves in flavor, and slices more easily, if made a day ahead and chilled (see Cooks' Notes). Editor's Note: This recipe is part of Gourmet's Modern Menu for Passover. Menu also includes Quinoa and Asparagus Salad with Mimosa Vinaigrette and Amaretto Olive Oil Cake.
Why? Because the meat is slowly braised in Pinot Noir, and the cherry notes in the wine pair brilliantly with dried tart cherries, which plump up with winey beef juices to become little mini-pouches of flavor on their own. Add to that a bit of star anise, which perfumes the brisket and your home with an exotic and enticing hint of licorice. Season the mixture with the sweet-and-sour agrodolce dance of brown sugar and balsamic vinegar, and you have a brisket that is at once counterintuitively familiar and wonderfully different. Like all braised meats, brisket improves in flavor, and slices more easily, if made a day ahead and chilled (see Cooks' Notes). Editor's Note: This recipe is part of Gourmet's Modern Menu for Passover. Menu also includes Quinoa and Asparagus Salad with Mimosa Vinaigrette and Amaretto Olive Oil Cake.
By Melissa Roberts
Lemon Pudding with Strawberries and Meringue Cigars
This sublime lemon dessert is the perfect antidote to all those chocolate bunnies and chocolate-stuffed eggs proliferating at Easter like, well…rabbits. It helps that our pudding is simple to make, too.
A seriously tart lemon curd—quickly cooked on top of the stove—is folded into sweetened whipped cream, which both tempers the tang and lightens the dessert with a suave silkiness. Crisp, airy wisps of meringue, lightly sprinkled with chopped pistachios and easily shaped and baked into cigars, are delightful on their own, but they're surprisingly efficient alternatives to spoons for delivering the pudding to your mouth. Editor's Note: This recipe is part of Gourmet's Modern Menu for Easter. Menu also includes Frisée, Radicchio, and Fennel Salad with Mustard Vinaigrette; and Arugula-Stuffed Leg of Lamb with Roasted Spring Vegetables; .
A seriously tart lemon curd—quickly cooked on top of the stove—is folded into sweetened whipped cream, which both tempers the tang and lightens the dessert with a suave silkiness. Crisp, airy wisps of meringue, lightly sprinkled with chopped pistachios and easily shaped and baked into cigars, are delightful on their own, but they're surprisingly efficient alternatives to spoons for delivering the pudding to your mouth. Editor's Note: This recipe is part of Gourmet's Modern Menu for Easter. Menu also includes Frisée, Radicchio, and Fennel Salad with Mustard Vinaigrette; and Arugula-Stuffed Leg of Lamb with Roasted Spring Vegetables; .
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Basic Crab Pan Sauce
Editor's note: Use this pan sauce to flavor Chef John Besh's Busters and Grits.
By John Besh
Scallops with Spice Oil
Blooming spices, or gently frying them in oil, is a quick way to deepen their flavor.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Charred Green Beans with Lemon Verbena Pesto
If you grow pole beans, you know that at first glance, you have only a few beans, and then suddenly there is an onslaught. That's when bean varieties like the green Blue Lake or the yellow wax beans can be stir-grilled with a bit of olive oil for a very simple yet satisfying dish to use the surplus of beans. When you're in the mood for a more robust sauce, try this lemony pesto tossed with the grilled beans right before serving.
Editor's note: If you can't find lemon verbena leaves or even fresh lemon balm leaves, substitute basil pesto.
By Karen Adler and Judith Fertig