Roast
Butter-Injected Turkey
By Brian Page
Jerk Pork Tenderloin
Coffee beans soften the heat of the chile and bring out the other flavors in this paste-like marinade. You can also use the paste on chicken, as they do at Maroons, where this dish is served. Begin marinating the meat the day before.
Greek-Spiced Game Hen with Clementines, Artichokes, and Olives
Serve with: Orzo tossed with fresh oregano and green onions, and buttered carrots.
Roasted Pork Loin with Fennel
This elegant dish would make a lovely entrée for a special-occasion dinner.
Roasted Potatoes with Crimini and Porcini Mushrooms
The combination of dried porcini and fresh crimini mushrooms gives this dish an intensely earthy flavor.
Torquato's Zucchini "Cigars"
Torquato Innocenti, who sells his just-harvested, still-prickly zucchini — with flowers attached, a sure sign of freshness — offered me simple advice for the vegetable. Roast them whole in a "puddle" of oil and serve with basil. I bought a bag of his smallest (cigar-size) zucchini, pan-roasted them until browned sprinkled them with chopped basil — and loved the results.
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
By Faith Willinger
Sort of Sephardic Sweet Potatoes and Squash
Sephardic Jews from Turkey, Greece, Morocco, and other countries of the Mediterranean region say seven special blessings over seven different symbolic foods at their Rosh Hashanah dinner. Five of these blessings are over vegetables — apples (candied or dipped in sugar or honey), leeks, beet greens or spinach, dates, and zucchini or squash. These blessings symbolize their hopes for the New Year. Many of these Jews trace their ancestors back to Spain, which is called Sepharad in the Bible. Over the centuries, the Sephardic Jews took advantage of the abundance of vegetables available in the Mediterranean countries, often throughout the year. Among these vegetables are sweet potatoes and squash, great favorites of my family. The special blessing you can say over your sweet potatoes and squash at the beginning of your Rosh Hashanah dinner goes like this:
Yehi ratzon mi-le-faneha Adonai Eloheinu ve-lo-hei avoteinu she-tik-rah ro-a gezar dinenu ve-yi-karehu lefa-neha za-hee-yo-teinu.
May it be thy will, Lord our God and God of our fathers, that you should tear up any evil decree and let only our merits be read before You.
By Joan Nathan
Salmon with Sesame and Orange-Ginger Relish
Look for wild salmon fillets. You can ask the fishmonger to remove the pinbones, or remove them at home with tweezers.
Serve with: Alsatian Riesling • sautéed sugar snap peas • rice pilaf with watercress and green onions • white chocolate crème brûlée
Garlic-Roasted Striped Bass
The <epi:recipelink id="102741">sautéed mushrooms epi:recipelinkawould make a great side dish for this fish, along with steamed green beans or broccoli.</epi:recipelinka></epi:recipelink>
Roasted Potato Wedges
<p>This recipe originally accompanied <epi:recipeLink id"100941">Roasted Pousins with Cumin and Lemon</epi:recipeLink>.</p>
<p>You can roast these potatoes along with the poussins. Simply put them into the upper third of the oven about 10 minutes before the birds go in. Then move the potatoes to the lower third of the oven so that the birds can fit in the upper third, and roast them about 45 minutes more.</p>
Roasted Lobster with Basil-Mint Pesto
For food safety reasons, the lobsters must be roasted immediately after they have been boiled and split.
Market tip: American lobster from the Northeast is still in fairly good supply, though vulnerable to fishing pressure. California spiny lobster is also a good choice in this recipe.