Apple
Crown Roast of Pork With Lady Apples and Shallots
Want a show-stopping centerpiece roast to feed a holiday dinner crowd? Crown roast is the answer.
Why Fry Latkes for Hanukkah When You Can Make These?
A brand-new tradition.
Apple Fritters With Spiced Sugar
Cinnamon, cardamom, and freshly ground black pepper lend warm spice to these sweet fritters.
How to Make Apple Pie With a Phyllo Crust
Forget traditional pie crust.
Kale Salad with Brussels Sprouts, Apples, and Hazelnuts
Brussels sprouts, apples, gouda, radishes, and hazelnuts turn this kale salad into something special enough to serve guests.
6 Things to Do With Apple Cider (Besides Drink It)
This unfermented, unfiltered, fresh crushed juice is great as a drink, and oh so much more.
Cider, Bacon, and Golden Raisin Stuffing
Meet our new favorite stuffing: two kinds of bread give it a deep earthy flavor, vinegar-spiked raisins lend sweet-tart high notes, and bacon makes it irresistible.
Layered Apple Pie With Phyllo Crust
It's all about the layers and ruffles in this dramatic seasonal pie.
Apple-Almond Turnover
Some almond paste is sold in a tube; other brands will be in a can in the baking aisle. If you don't have a scale, measure 1/2 cup, packed.
Dry-Brined Turkey
You will need to start the brining process two days ahead.
How Can I Make Homemade Pies Without Losing My Mind?
Buh-bye, pie anxiety!
What's a Cocktail That Won't Get My Uncle Drunk?
What cocktail should I serve?
Butternut Squash with Apple & Cranberries
This seasonal favorite is sure to please.
Endive, Apple, and Celery Salad With Smoked Almonds and Cheddar
A mix of sweet, smoky, and pleasingly bitter notes gives this crisp, bright salad a modern flair.
Upgrade Your Hot Apple Cider
A few twists make this signature fall drink even more inviting.
5 Apple Recipes for Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner
How do you like them apples? For breakfast, lunch, and dinner, hopefully.
7 Ways to Make Baked, Stuffed Apples
The fastest way to upgrade fall's favorite fruit.
How to Prep Potatoes to Make Them Extra-Crispy
This simple prep turns potatoes—and other fruits and veg—into a dignified series of golden, hyperflavored layers.
Apple Jack Stack Cake
Appalachian apple stack cake is communal cooking at its finest. Originally, each layer was baked at home by individual cooks, likely in cast-iron skillets, then brought together and assembled for church suppers and gatherings. Instead of the spongy cakes we're used to today, these layers are more like cookies—firmer, so they slowly soften beneath liberal applications of apple butter and cooked apples. This recipe stays mostly true to those principles.
Instead of individually baking the layers one skillet at a time, though, use a cake pan to trace a pattern on parchment paper and trim circles of rolled dough to fit it. Bake two layers simultaneously (more if you have a convection oven). The edges of the cake layers won't be as perfectly neat as if you'd baked them in skillets or cake pans, but that's all right. This is a rustic cake.