Cheese
Cheese, Bread, and Egg Soup
This simple soup, known as zuppa Sarda, is eaten year-round all over Sardinia.
Cherry-Apricot Cream Cheese Tart
Use a cherry pitter to remove the pits before cutting the cherries in half.
Grilled Cheese and Kalua-Pig Sandwiches
Wong uses Fontina cheese and includes a slice of foie gras in each of these improbably luxurious grilled cheese sandwiches. At the restaurant, they are served with a Martini glass filled with swirled, chilled red and yellow tomato soups that the waiter instructs you to down in one gulp. Salud!
Grilled Pizza and Sausage and Salsa
This recipe makes plenty of extra salsa to serve on tacos or with chips.
By Dr. Mima Kapches
Roquefort Terrine
"While in Greenville, South Carolina, we dined at The Palms, located in the Phoenix Inn," writes Marilyn J. Smith of Bradford, Pennsylvania. "All their food is outstanding, but I would particularly like the recipe for the Roquefort terrine. It was delicious!"
Egg, Canadian Bacon, and Cheddar Sandwiches
Sound familiar? OK, we admit it —when we're on the road we're partial to this well-known breakfast sandwich. But at home we like to prepare it this way.
Vegetable Soup with Basil and Garlic
Soupe au Pistou
During Marion Cunningham’s last visit with Richard Olney, he made a version of this recipe, which comes from Simple French Food. As he made it, he told her that he thought the trick to cooking is tasting — in the case of the soup that day, adding the right amount of salt and pepper, then cheese, then a little olive oil, and finally some macaroni. After making the soup in our own kitchens, following the recipe from the book (it's highly adaptable to seasonal produce or the contents of your larder), we can understand why this recipe is so loved among Olney’s fans.
Beet Salad with Ricotta Salata and Black Olive Croutons
At her restaurant, Lynch includes black truffle in the vinaigrette for this salad, but it's so flavorful as it is that we didn't feel the truffle was necessary.
By Barbara Lynch
Cheesecake with Fresh Berries
Russian cheesecakes, like this one served at The Kaleenka in Seattle, are lighter and drier than most American versions. The texture comes from a dry-curd cheese (known here a hoop cheese) common to Russian cooking.