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Potato Soup with Swiss Cheese
By Eloise Davison
Chicken with Red Bell Peppers
By Dawn Murray
Chicken with Dumplings
By Betty Wason
Goat Cheese with Bell Pepper Dressing
This is very easy to prepare and it makes an elegant addition to any party.
Buckwheat Batter
The following recipe - which cannot be halved successfully - makes twice the batter necessary for the Egg and Bacon Crêpes or the Egg and Spinach Crêpes .
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Spinach and Ricotta Gnocchi
(Gnocchi di Spinaci e Ricotta)
These gnocchi are also known in different parts of Tuscany as malfatti (badly made), ravioli nudi (naked ravioli) or topini verdi (little green mice). Gnocchi are among the oldest foods in Italy, and the spinach ones are a specialty of the Casentino, an area east of Florence where greens grow wild on the hillsides.
Spicy Shrimp with Andouille Sausage on Grits
"On a tour of the South, I had dinner at The Boathouse, an outstanding restaurant in Charleston, South Carolina," says Marion Hunt of Valhalla, New York. "Their spicy shrimp and sausage with grits was my favorite meal of the entire trip."
The creamy grits and spicy sauce create a nice contrast. Adjust the amount of hot pepper sauce to make the dish as hot as you like.
Smoked Fish Chowder
Offer crackers and some coleslaw along with the chowder. Lemon meringue pie is a perfect way to end the meal.
Lemony Rice Soup with Ham and Spring Vegetables
Round out the menu with sliced radicchio, fennel and roasted bell pepper salad; crisp flatbread; and apricot sorbet with cookies.
Farro Salad with Peas, Favas, Arugula and Tomatoes
Farro, an old-world wheat variety, has taken today's Tuscan cooking by storm. It has been cultivated in the Garfagnana — an area of forests in northern Tuscany — for millennia. Traditionally, the grain was used to make soups and porridge; now it's a part of any number of dishes, including risotto, where it replaces the rice, and salads like this one. If you cannot find farro, use wheat berries.
Gumbo Ya Ya
By Michelle McRaney
Hainanese Chicken Rice
This three-in-one dish (chicken, rice, and soup) originated in Hainan, a tropical island off China's southern coast, and has become a culinary staple in Malaysian culture.