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Quick

Easy Cornbread

This bread is also perfect with chili.

Chocolate-Chicory Sauce

This addictive sauce is also incredible with beignets or ice cream.

Bacon-Cheddar Muffins

For perfectly browned tops, cook one pan at a time on the topmost oven rack.

Oysters with Brown Sugar–Chipotle Butter

Even if you're not an oyster person, you'll love this buttery, broiled approach.

Sweet Amigos

Cinnamon and cherry give this tequila concoction a festive, wintry vibe.

Bourbon Balls

These taste even better a few days after they're made.

Egg Wash

Feel free to substitute whole milk for the heavy cream.

Bobby Burns

This clubby Scotch drink was created at the old Waldorf Astoria in New York City.

Spiced Pumpkin Seeds

This zesty combination makes a lively snack or tasty addition to salads and grain dishes any time of year.

Black Sesame–Brown Sugar Shortbread

A simple toasty and buttery treat.

Cranberry and Corn Pancakes

Frozen corn and cranberries are the secret to these festive flapjacks.

Garlic Oil

Garlic oil is one of my favorite "secret ingredients" for finishing pizzas. It's quick and easy to make, but it's best made at least an hour in advance. The longer you leave it, the more the garlic flavor infuses into the oil, so I recommend making it a day ahead, at the same time you make your sauce.

No Noodle Pad Thai

This popular Thai dish has been cooked regularly in our kitchen ever since we first tried it in Bangkok. The first time we made it at home, we stayed true to the original recipe by stir-frying rice noodles in a sweet and a slightly spicy sauce, but through the years, it has slowly transformed into something new. Instead of stir-frying rice noodles, we now simply peel a daikon radish (courgette/zucchini also works fine) into thin strips that we toss with carrot strands, tofu and fresh herbs and cover with a peanut butter and lime dressing. Even though we have changed both cooking method and ingredients, it still has that wonderful flavor combination of sweet, nutty, tangy and a little spicy and the experience is light, fresh and, in our opinion, even tastier.

Rimini

Mmm. Fried dough. On a trip to Rimini, a resort town on Italy's Adriatic coast, I had a memorable fried pizza topped with cheese and ham. To re-create it, I came up with this shallow-fry method in which you fry the dough, then flip it, top it with mozzarella, and cover it with a lid to melt the cheese. In honor of Rimini, I've topped this one with the region's famous squacquerone cheese, which is as deliciously soft and runny as it is difficult to pronounce. If you can't find it, you can use crescenza (also known as stracchino). It goes on after frying and quickly melts on the hot crust. I also add thin slices of the cooked ham sold in Italian delis as prosciutto cotto. Not to be confused with prosciutto, which is cured but not cooked, this is what we know as ham, but it's a bit paler, less smoky, and more delicate than typical American deli ham. For this method, it's really helpful to roll your dough out as close to the stove top as possible and to have everything set up before you start cooking: your skillet on the stove top, a lid within easy reach, your cheeses and toppings measured out, and a plate lined with paper towels right next to the stove. Keep a close eye on the heat as you fry and adjust it as needed so the dough cooks all the way through without burning on the outside.

Broiled Salmon Steaks

Brighten up simply broiled salmon steaks with an unexpected salsa of poblano chiles, capers, and lemon.

Roasted Beets with Sesame and Marjoram

Prettiest when not piled too high; divide the salad over two platters and put one at each end of the table.
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