Winter
Apple and Cranberry Crisps with Ginger-Pecan Topping
This recipe can be doubled and baked in a 13x9x2-inch baking dish.
Bibb Lettuce Salad with Candied Walnuts, Oranges, and Feta
Carol Gilbert of Saratoga, California, writes: "I've been many things in my life — including a teacher and a stay-at-home mom — but now, at 63, I am a one-person technical documentation department for a start-up company. The hours are not nine to five, so I can't put vast amounts of time into cooking these days, but I have never lost my love for it. Nevertheless, I cook about five nights a week for myself and my husband, David. Despite the long days, I want to have a home-cooked meal in the evening. So, I'm organized: I draw up a weekly menu plan, make a shopping list, and take one trip to the market. I could not survive without my plan!"
You can substitute Boston or butter lettuce if Bibb isn't available. Save even more prep time by using packaged candied walnuts or other nuts that are now widely available and are often displayed in the produce or snack aisles of the supermarket.
By Carol Gilbert
White Bean, Kale and Roasted Vegetable Soup
Many dark, leafy greens, like kale, contain calcium. The beans have it, too.
Turkey Sage Chowder
For a variation, you could throw in a cup of cooked vegetables left over from Thanksgiving to add texture to this creamy chowder. Serve the soup with chowder crackers, along with a spinach and pear salad. Purchased apple turnovers would make an ideal dessert.
Shrimp Escabèche with Blood Orange Mojo
This dish combines Spanish escabeche (marinated poached fish) with a new take on mojo, a Cuban sauce typically made with the juice of tart oranges, garlic, and herbs.
Spareribs and Sauerkraut
You just cannot do this one wrong. You don't have to drain the sauerkraut. You don't even brown the ribs; they brown without your help. The recipe was handed down to Camille MacKusick by her father-in-law, from the family archives. All sorts of magical juices ooze out of everything. When the last finger is licked and the last lip smacked, everyone will weep.
By Karyl Bannister
Bok Choy Gratin
The most commonly found Chinese vegetable is also one of the oldest — bok choy has been cultivated in China since the fifth century a.d. You can find many kinds of bok choy at Asian markets, all differing in shape and size; this recipe works well with any mature variety.
Active time: 40 min Start to finish: 1 hr
Braised Chicken with Garlic and White Wine
The chicken is redolent of garlic, but not overly so; cooking the garlic cloves whole in their skins keeps the flavors in balance. What to drink: A spicy red from Spain's Ribera del Duero region. Try the 2000 vintage from this appellation, known for its rich blends of Tempranillo, Cabernet, and Merlot.
Braised Duck Legs with Shallots and Parsnips
We used chef Fergus Henderson's technique for braising duck legs so the skin sides, peeking above the liquid like "alligators in a swamp," stay crisp while the meat braises.
Molasses Spice Leaves
These Christmas cookies are topped with white icing and silver dragées for added elegance. Look for the dragées in the cake decorating section of your supermarket.
Spicy Bacon, Onion and Cheese Potatoes
This side dish goes especially well with grilled or broiled meats.
By Gretchen Davis
Colonial Times Apple-Cranberry Pie with Cornmeal Crust
Thanks to the native Wampanoags, the Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth Rock in 1620 were quickly introduced to such important New World foods as cranberries and corn. The newcomers returned the favor by planting apples, which flourished and were soon available in many American varieties. This wonderful holiday pie, with its cornmeal crust and mixed-fruit filling, celebrates that early culinary sharing. It's a delicious combination of some of our most traditional American flavors.
Whipped Sweet Potatoes with Cardamom
Sweet potatoes have been cultivated in the South since at least the 1700s. A touch of cardamom gives this dish modern flair.
Spritz Christmas Wreath Cookies
Spritz cookies-from the German Spritzen, meaning "to squirt"- are formed into fanciful shapes when the dough is piped through a cookie press. One food editor still uses her aunt Carol's old metal spritzer to make these delicate cookie.
Apple Chutney
Apples did so well in the colonies that they were exported to the West Indies, and Virginians eventually sold Pippins back to the mother country.
Walnut Acorn Cookies
"These cookies have been baked by my mother, by me, and now by my daughters at Christmastime," writes Suzanne Perry of Columbus, Ohio. "The recipe was given to my mother by a Swedish friend."
Active time: 1 1/2 hr Start to finish: 2 1/2 hr