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Get Fried Green Tomatillos with Burrata, Cumin and Basil Recipe from Food Network
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Your favorite fresh fruit works beautifully in these simple, buttery muffins. They freeze well, too.
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This classic recipe is adapted from “Tastes Like Cuba,” by Eduardo Machado and Michael Domitrovich The secret is the homemade sofrito, but bottled will do in a pinch.
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If you love the combination of oranges, coconut and marshmallows found in a traditional ambrosia — the salad or dessert that often also contains pineapple, bananas, cherries and some kind of creamy dressing such as whipped cream or sour cream — you’ll adore this cake The coconut is baked into the cake layers and used as a sweet, shaggy garnish, while the oranges (in this case, diminutive, seedless clementines) are juiced into curd and sliced fresh for the filling Then, as a final, fluffy touch, a homemade marshmallow frosting tops it off
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Behold the best mashup ever, the croissant taco! These crispy golden pastry shells have fine masa harina in a buttery croissant dough, resulting in flaky layers with a chewy interior.
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Chicken legs are simmered in a mix of vinegar, soy sauce, garlic, and black peppercorns in this easy dinner.
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A simple dill dip recipe made with fresh dill and dried dill weed, mayonnaise, and sour cream.
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Based on the Italian classic, this take on spaghetti carbonara uses spaghetti squash in place of pasta to go with the creamy bacon-spiked sauce.
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This mostly-custard bread pudding is creamy and sweet. Serve it warm or cold.
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Sauerkraut is slow cooked with clove, bay leaf, and juniper berries. This dish is wonderful baked along with your main meat entree.
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With a little knife work and a slow simmer, the pineapple sauce is ready in no time at all While it shines in a banana split, turning a sundae from typical to tropical, you’ll find many other ways to use it: between the layers of a classic yellow cake, added to yogurt or cottage cheese, or combined with spicy mustard and chopped scallions for a sensational baked chicken.
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Not a pudding, but a puffed pastry baked with meat drippings. We in the U.S. tend to think Yorkshire pudding and popovers are the same thing. Popovers are hard and very airy. Yorkshire pudding is softer and doesn't rise as high as a popover. Traditionally served with roast beef.
Ingredients: flour, milk, eggs, salt, bacon drippings