Celery
Crudites and Chips with Taco Ranch Dip
A sure-fire way to get the kids to eat their vegetables—and chips, of course.
Chicken Breasts with Prosciutto and Sage
This can also be prepared with duck breasts, which is how it is often made in Tuscany. Either way, the dish is good with rosemary-flavored mashed potatoes and sautéed artichoke hearts.
Upscale Macaroni and Cheese
Everyone's favorite childhood dish gets a sophisticated twist with the addition of red bell peppers, celery and blue cheese. But never fear: The kid in you — and all the kids — will love it.
Lobster Bisque
By Coleen Deon and Richard Deon
Southern Rice Pilaf Stuffing with Ham, Pecans and Greens
At Thanksgiving, rice stuffings are standard on many southern tables. This one, a combination of white rice and wild rice, gets more regional notes from collard greens, pecans and ham.
Country-Style Peppered Pork and Bread Stuffing
Jim Fobel, cookbook author, says, "My mother always added lots of sage and nutmeg to her stuffing. I loved those flavors when I was a kid, and I still put them in the stuffings that I make today."
Vegetable-Cheese Soup
"Cooking with friends — that's pretty much what my life has been about," writes Louise Pickerel of Muskogee, Oklahoma. "When I moved here from Texas ten years ago, it was hard to leave the people I'd known for so long, but I've probably met two hundred new people since then. I have always entertained, but now that I'm retired, I finally have more time to play bridge and cook."
Louise likes to serve this chunky soup with ham or roast beef sandwich wraps.
By Louise Pickerel
Mashed Potatoes with Celery
"I have a 'stragglers Thanksgiving' — that's what I call it — at my house every year," writes Frances Teasley of North Hollywood, California. "I know a lot of people who, like me, don't have any family nearby. Thirteen years ago I started inviting a few people for dinner. And that small holiday gathering has become a big tradition among my friends. For weekday meals, I look for shortcuts and do-aheads. But for holiday meals, I like to do everything the same day because I love the smell of cooking that fills the house."
Sourdough-Cranberry Stuffing
By Charlie Trotter
Artichoke Caponata (Capunata 'i Cacuocciuli)
Sicilian caponata is a salad or side dish composed of several vegetables cooked separately and joined together by a sauce, often of tomato. Serve it as an antipasto or with grilled meat or fish.
To keep artichokes from browning as trim them, run a paring knife through a lemon before each cut. The juice on the knife acidulates the surface of the artichoke.