Weeknight Meals
Chicken with Baby Onions
By Danielle Brackett
Chicken Sauté with Garlic
By James Beard
Blue and Red Flannel Hash
A great-tasting hash that gets its kick from the combination of Maytag blue cheese, spicy sausage, red bell pepper and beets.
Canary Islands Spicy Potatoes
I lived in the Canary Islands for ten years and am reminded in a small way of that happy time whenever I make my former neighbor's spicy potatoes (tradition has it that the real thing is cooked in sea water). I hope that you will enjoy them--they go wonderfully well with grilled fish and meat.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
By Hilary Osgood
Tommy's Rice and Beans
(From Chris Schlesinger and John Willoughby, License to Grill, Morrow, 1997)
Tommy who? Chris and John explain: "This classic Latin American dish is that rare bird, a completely healthful vegetarian meal that appeals to the taste buds of teenagers. Or at least it appeals to the buds of Tommy, a teenager who lives in the apartment above one of us and is the nephew of the other one. Tommy prefers his rice and beans cooked separately, rather than together, and likes lots of garlic and only a few bell peppers in the mix; so that's how we make it here. For some reason, it has almost as high an appeal rating as pizza and chips, those quintessential meatless teenage favorites."
By Stephanie Pierson
Spinach, Beet and Walnut Salad
Food writer Janet Fletcher says, "During my childhood, the only salad on the Thanksgiving buffet was an old-fashioned Waldorf with chopped apples, celery, walnuts and mayonnaise. Frankly, I don’t miss it. This contemporary salad has the walnuts and the crunch, but is much fresher and far more inviting."
By Janet Fletcher
Chicken Costa Del Sol
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
To go with the chicken, toss some greens with lemon vinaigrette, mix fresh chopped parsley into rice pilaf and cut a crusty load of bread into thick slices. Cantaloupe doused with sweet Marsala is a great finish.
Mediterranean Salad
By Diane Berry
Spiced Lentils
Known as dal in India, this dish is often offered over rice or topped with plain yogurt.
By Prem K. Singh
Artichokes, Capers, Olives, Lemon Zest, and Italian Tuna on Pasta Shells
In Italy a no-cook pasta sauce is known as salsa cruda, and makes a wonderful one-dish dinner. In this version, the combination of artichokes, olives, capers, and lemon zest is not only beautiful, but bold in flavor.
By Linda West Eckhardt and Katherine West DeFoyd
Vegetable Moussaka
Although it would be years before most Greek cooking would become familiar to Americans, one Greek dish, moussaka, did catch on in the seventies.
Southwest-Style Salisbury Steaks
Dr. James Henry Salisbury might have been the first of the protein-diet doctors, proclaiming in 1888 that humankind's maladies were caused by too much starchy food. His solution? Chopped lean meat, or hamburger steak. To hide the "liver-y" taste of hamburger, he recommended adding horseradish, mustard or Worcestershire sauce. By the 1900s, Salisbury steak was a staple menu item, often served with mushroom gravy or smothered in onions. This version, inspired by today’s southwestern cooking, has terrific flavor.