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No-Cook

Avocado Mayonnaise

This recipe was created to accompany Avocado Mayonnaise . Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Mango Salsa Wilfert

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Hard-Boiled Egg, Roquefort, and Scallion Dip

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Spicy Gazpacho

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less but requires additional unattended time.

Smoked Salmon Sandwiches with Capers and Red Onion Relish

For a nice presentation, garnish the plates with thin cucumber slices, watercress sprigs and some radishes.

Carrot Salad with Oregano and Cumin

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Chopped Salad of Cucumber, Red Onion, Lemon, and Parsley

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Fennel and Watercress Salad

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Mediterranean Salad

Pick up stuffed grape leaves, marinated mushrooms and crusty bread from the deli to round out the menu. Finish with an almond tart and brandied espresso.

Buttermilk Sherbet

The reader who requested a recipe for buttermilk sherbet the way his mother used to make it was moved by more than nostalgia. This preparation is so light and so refreshing that it deserves a new vogue in the nineties.

Basic French Vinaigrette

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Lemon Ice Cream

This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less but requires addtional sitting time. Carol's mom used a grater and superfine sugar when she made this recipe, but we liked the ease of grinding the zest with regular sugar in a food processor. Best of all, we never once skinned our knuckles.

Smoked Fish and White Bean Brandade

Brandade, a specialty of Languedoc and Provence, inspired the following recipe. Also called brandade de morue ("ragout of cod"), it is classically a purée of salt cod, olive oil, and milk, often thickened with bread or potato. Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Spicy-Sweet Kumquats

Pop one of these in your mouth for a burst of bittersweet flavor.

Chef's Salad

The chef's salad is a familiar yet fading star in the salad world. In delicatessens, diners, and airport snack bars everywhere, we find its faithful components: lifeless leaves of iceberg lettuce, suspiciously blue-hued slices of hard-boiled egg, wedges of pallid tomato, and rubbery chunks of cheese, ham, and turkey. To top it all off (or perhaps sitting alongside): gloppy, high-calorie dressing. But this still-beloved salad may have had a noble beginning. Though nobody has ever stepped forward to claim the title of the chef in "chef's salad," the dish has been attributed by some food historians to Louis Diat, chef of The Ritz-Carlton in New York City in the early 1940s. He paired watercress with halved hard-boiled eggs and julienne strips of smoked tongue, ham, and chicken. (The concept of the chef’s salad dates still earlier; one seventeenth-century English recipe for a "grand sallet" calls for lettuce, roast meat, and a slew of vegetables and fruits.) No matter how the salad has evolved, its underlying virtue remains unchanged. This is a no-cook meal that satisfies our cravings for greens and protein. And, in these dog days of summer-when cooking is sometimes the last thing we'd like to do-a main-course salad is especially appealing. In our updated take on the classic recipe, we used a selection of lettuces (early chef's salads were not always made with iceberg alone), and, in a twist on the norm, small but flavorful amounts of sugar-cured ham and Parmigiano-Reggiano. Feel free to improvise with ingredients depending on what looks good at your farmers market. Summer savory or dill can flavor the dressing in place of the mixed herbs, and many kinds of ham and cheese will work well.

Light Lemon Yogurt Sauce

Gently drain the liquid from the top of the yogurt before combining with other ingredients so that the flavors are not diluted.
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