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American

Turkey Meat Loaf with Sun-Dried Tomatoes

A crowd-pleasing standard gets a makeover with ground turkey instead of beef; sautéed vegetables and sun-dried tomatoes add flavor. Round out the meat loaf with the mashed potatoes, some green beans and dinner rolls. Pour a dry white or light red wine.

Romaine Caesar Salad

In doubling or tripling this recipe, you can put all the ingredients for the dressing into a blender (cutting the amount of garlic in half) for a quick whirl. Store the dressing in a screw-cap jar until the salad is ready to be tossed. The flavor is the same, but the texture of the dressing is creamy and looks less attractive on the romaine.

Lemon Buttermilk Pie

Lemon brightens the sweet tang of buttermilk in this dairy-state specialty.

Colonial Brown Bread

Like steamed Boston brown bread, this baked version is quickly mixed together and makes a dense, fragrant loaf. Rye bread flour is sold at natural foods stores, specialty food stores and some supermarkets.

Full O' Beans Chili

A stick-to-the-ribs-not-the-waistline chili. Great served with all the usual toppings: chopped red or green onions, chopped cilantro, shredded cheddar cheese (low-fat, of course) and nonfat yogurt.

Hermit Bars

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Red Bell Pepper Corn Bread

This flavorful bread uses just a tad of canola oil instead of lots of butter.

Blueberry Sour Cream Pie

The almond-scented blueberry filling is sprinkled with a pecan topping.

Pork and Chipotle Tacos

These superb tacos are from chef Alex Castro at the Old Mexico Grill in Santa Fe.

Strawberry Rhubarb Cobbler with Cornmeal Biscuit Topping

The cornmeal biscuit topping adds some crunch to the winning combination of fresh strawberries and rhubarb.

Sweet and Smoky Barbecue Beans

Team these with grilled or broiled chicken, or add a green salad and some crusty whole wheat bread for a simple supper.

Hamburger Pie

Now and again all a recipe requires to embitter a child is one fatal ingredient. My siblings tell me that they recall Hamburger Pie as a kid-friendly favorite. I dreaded it. Spying its mashed-potato crust through the oven window, I always groaned. Today my stomach still sinks with recollection, and here's why: sliced green beans from a can. Yes, they're fast, but can anyone defend the taste, texture, or color of canned green beans? My sister has tried to gussy up this dish, and I'm sure you can find many hoity-toity versions (usually called Shepherd's Pie). But here, taken from the brittle pages of her kitchen scrapbook, is the very recipe my mom prepared for her ungrateful son. Everything in it could be found in our house on any day. Mothers take note: This recipe would allow fresh green beans, cooked. Unless, of course, your little epicure insists on canned!

Hoppin' John (Black-Eyed Peas with Kielbasa)

There has been much debate over the strange name of this rice and bean combination. One theory suggests that "Hoppin' John" is a corruption of pois à pigeon, French for pigeon peas, with which the dish was originally made in the French colonies of the Caribbean, where it was likely created.

Sourdough, Apple and Almond Dressing

San Francisco is famous for its sourdough, and a wide variety of apples are grown in Sonoma. In this sensational dressing, both ingredients are combined with almonds, which are harvested throughout the state. If you are roasting a turkey in a 350°F oven, cook the stuffing alongside, covered for 45 minutes and uncovered for about 15 minutes.

Chocolate-Swirl Cheesecake

To save time, simply skip the topping.

Chicken Breasts with Cornmeal-Coriander Crust and Black Bean-Mango Salsa

Cornmeal adds a nice crispness to the coating for the chicken. The salsa and the Three-Pepper Slaw with Chipotle Dressing make this a colorful entrée. For drinks, mix up some tequila-lime spritzers by combining a little tequila with fresh lime juice and sparkling water, or uncork a bottle of dry Gewürztraminer.

Oven-Roasted Turkey Roulade

Ask the butcher to bone, skin and butterfly the turkey breast. You will also need some cheesecloth (available in most supermarkets) for wrapping the roulade before cooking.
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