Simmer
Cream of Peas, Raisin Bread Gnocchetti, and Fresh Goat Cheese
Luisa Marelli Valazza's interpretation of a classic Italian peasant soup at her three-Michelin-starred restaurant, Al Sorriso in Piedmont, is hands-down stunning. It's a hearty and rustic showstopper: thick and creamy fresh pea soup with tiny gnocchetti made from raisin pumpernickel bread. Great on a cold and rainy spring evening (fresh pea season). Luisa said it was three simple steps, but it's a little more than that . . .
By Suzanne Pirret
Crushed-Blueberry Sauce
By Abby Dodge
Pasta e Fagioli con Salsicce (Pasta and Beans with Sausage)
If you're pressed for time, you can sub 1 1/2 cups canned beans for the dried. There's no need to precook the canned beans—just drain and rinse them before adding them to the onions.
By Joseph W. DiPerri
Short Rib and Vegetable Stew
"Koreans are short rib masters," says Chou, who lived and cooked in Korea for several years. "It's their favorite cut." While some ribs are sliced thin, marinated, and grilled, others are reserved for stews and soups. Kalbi jjim, one of the countrys best-known concoctions, shares some ingredients with a European beef stewnamely, carrots, onions, and potatoes—but here the brothy, slightly sweet dish gets its robust undertones from dried mushrooms, soy sauce, fish sauce, and molasses, plus a dollop of hot red-pepper paste. Though it is rustic-looking, the meat's tenderness and the broths amazing depth make clear why this dish is a national treasure.
By Lillian Chou
Brown Rice and Barley
Rice has pride of place at the Korean table, but Koreans have also long embraced the healthful properties of other whole grains like millet, barley, and oats. This combination is fragrant and delicious.
By Lillian Chou
Leftover-Roast-Chicken-Stock
This time-honored example of kitchen thrift is ready when you are: Have it simmering away while you tend to another meal or are puttering around on a Saturday morning. Just looking at it in the refrigerator or freezer will make you happy, secure in the knowledge that you can put a terrific meal on the table in no time at all.
By Kay Chun
Hot Ginger Tea with Cinnamon
Pleasantly pungent and sweetened to taste with honey, this tea soothes and refreshes after a big meal. (We also like to brew a pot any time we feel a little under the weather.) Nibbling on the pine nuts as you sip the hot tea helps soften its strong flavors.
By Lillian Chou
Linguine with Brussel Sprouts Barigoule
A Provençal barigoule is almost always applied to artichokes, but why limit yourself? Nutty-sweet Brussels sprouts take beautifully to the wine-lemon broth.
By Kay Chun
Tomatoey Spiced Chickpeas
Chickpeas loaded with warming, aromatic spices become a hearty vegetarian dinner when served with rice, cucumber salad, and a dollop of thick, cool yogurt. They're also great alongside roast chicken.
By Paul Grimes
Onion Soup with Loads of Thyme and Giant Gruyère Crostini
Whenever the weather begins to get cold, I begin to fantasize about that perfect bowl of French onion soup. The top is golden and crisp, the cheese has blistered and fallen and is completely melted, and gooey bits are stuck to the outer sides of the bowl. When I cut through the cheese, the bread is slightly crisp, but mushy at the same time. I fill my spoon with the rich, full broth crammed with soft, sweet, smoky onions. Here's my fantasy in a bowl.
By Jessica Strand
Orecchiette
Protein-rich garbanzo flour can be found at health-food grocers (such as Whole Foods).
By Victoria Granof
Buttered Cabbage
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Irish Traditional Cooking by Darina Allen.
This recipe for quickly cooked cabbage has converted many an ardent cabbage hater!
By Darina Allen
Corned Beef with Cabbage
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Irish Traditional Cooking by Darina Allen.
Although this dish is eaten less frequently nowadays in Ireland, for Irish expatriots it conjures up powerful nostalgic images of a rural Irish past. Originally it was a traditional Easter Sunday dinner. The beef, killed before the winter, would have been salted and could now be eaten after the long Lenten fast, with fresh green cabbage and floury potatoes. Our local butcher corns beef in the slow, old-fashioned way which, alas, is nowadays more the exception than the norm.
By Darina Allen
Champ
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Irish Traditional Cooking by Darina Allen.
One of the best-loved ways of cooking potatoes was (and is) to mash them with boiling milk, add chopped scallions or chives and serve this creamy, green-flecked mixture with a blob of yellow butter melting in the center. Leeks, nettles, peas and brown crispy onions are all delicious additions.
By Darina Allen
Colander Spaetzle
Don't worry if the batter for this traditional German staple seems a bit thin—it should be more liquidy than a normal dough.
By Victoria Granof
Egg Noodle
For a nutrition boost, replace one of the eggs with 1/2 cup of pureed beans or vegetables. (That's two 2-ounce jars of baby food.)
By Victoria Granof
Chicken Soup with Asparagus and Shiitakes, Served with Roasted Fennel Matzo Balls
Set in spring, when the earth is renewing and reassembling herself, Passover is celebrated as a sort of second New Year, reflecting the rebirth of the Jews as a free people after the Exodus from Egypt. Children start the season with new clothes, and houses are thoroughly cleaned and freshened up to make way for the new foods and special sets of dishes reserved just for Passover use.
And just as they delay until Rosh Hashanah their first tastes of the sweet new autumn fruits, so many Jews wait until Passover to savor the tender new vegetables of spring. In this delicious soup, woodsy shiitake mushrooms and early asparagus combine with delicate roasted fennel-flavored matzo balls in a free-wheeling ode to spring.
By Jayne Cohen
Couscous with Fennel and Pinenuts
Fresh fennel and fennel seeds infuse the couscous with a subtle anise flavor.
By Joanne Weir
Chicken and White Bean Soup with Herb Swirl
By Maria Helm Sinskey