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A&E >  Cooking

A family-favorite potato and spinach casserole gets lightened up

This recipe is a tradition that snuck up on my family. My grandmother Debbie made it every Passover and Rosh Hashanah for as long as I can remember and, my mom says, for as long as she can remember, too. It remains a constant on our table to this day, long after Grandma Debbie’s passing, and I couldn’t imagine our holiday dinner without the crisp-topped mashed potato casserole with its ribbonlike layer of spinach, generously scooped on the “good china” and ready to be pooled with brisket gravy.
A&E >  Food

Chicken shawarma in a bowl is a tasty, healthy meal

Protein bowls are appealing for many reasons, the biggest of which is they're incredibly versatile. Whether you top them with a lean meat like roasted chicken or a fatty, good-for-you fish like salmon — or opt for a vegetarian source of protein such as tofu or canned chickpeas — bowls can fill you up with countless combinations, while also making you feel great about how well you're eating. ...

A&E >  Cooking

Make a London Fog tea latte and bring the coffee shop favorite home

I’m not much of a coffee drinker, so when I suggest to someone that we “go out for coffee,” what that usually translates to in my head is grabbing a pastry, ordering something sugary that bears little resemblance to actual coffee or, ideally, getting a nice cup of tea.
A&E >  Cooking

How to make the angel food cake of your dreams

I first encountered angel food dream cake in an old Swans Down cake flour recipe booklet. At its core, it is nothing more than a traditional angel food cake with the “dreamy” addition of a whipped cream frosting that elevates it into something celebration-worthy.
A&E >  Cooking

Salute spring’s arrival with lamb chops over a minty pea puree

With the arrival of spring comes many reasons to celebrate: more hours of sunlight, the first signs of warmer weather, all of the holidays, my birthday (okay, that one might just be me) and a new crop of produce to enjoy. Let’s honor the season with a meal of pan-seared lamb chops, a luscious pea and mint puree, and tart-sweet pomegranate.
A&E >  Cooking

One-pot meal has flavor and crunch

Here’s a flavorful vegetable one-pot dinner that takes only minutes to make. One secret to the flavor is escarole. It is part of the chicory family. When escarole is raw it has a slightly bitter flavor and when cooked it adds a mellow touch to the dish. Toasted pecans add a crunchy texture. I use dried thyme and oregano for the dish.
A&E >  Cooking

Roast canned tomatoes for a savory red pesto to toss with pasta

There is nothing unusual about grabbing a couple of cans of tomatoes off the shelf to make a pasta sauce, particularly in the winter when tomatoes are offseason. That’s where this recipe starts. But it quickly veers into uncommonly good territory as these canned tomatoes are roasted. Canned tomatoes are already cooked, so their flavor is somewhat concentrated, but roasting them doubles down on that, further intensifying their umami and imparting a fire-cooked essence. That deep, complex, savoriness anchors this mouthwatering pesto.
A&E >  Cooking

Omani-style chickpeas are a buttery, garlicky weeknight treat

Lately, in these waning days of winter, I’ve been daydreaming about my favorite comfort meals. Baked potato soup, macaroni and cheese, kashk-o bademjan, lasagna – food that makes you go mmm. New to my list is this bowl of warm, saucy, garlicky, buttery chickpeas. Known as dango in Oman, this version was adapted from the recipe in Rose Previte’s “Maydan: Recipes From Lebanon and Beyond.”
A&E >  Cooking

Spanish and Mexican chorizo are different, but both pack a flavor punch

There’s a wide world of chorizo out there. The first sausage is believed to have been made “around 500 years ago on the Iberian Peninsula, where the chiles arrived after the Columbian Exchange,” food writer Rachel Wharton wrote for TASTE. From there, it spread with the people of that region. “Think of any place Spain or Portugal once brutally colonized – the southernmost stretch of the United States, Mexico, much of Central and South America, several islands in the Caribbean – and you can bet all of them now have proud chorizo traditions of their own.”