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Root Vegetable

Grilled Red Pearl Onions

These onions work as a starter or as an accompaniment to steak and salad.

Beet, Chickpea, and Almond Dip with Pita Chips

Greek cuisine is famed for its appetizer dips — no meze party would be complete without at least one.

Leek and Celery Pie

Pitas, or savory pies, are ubiquitous in mountainous Epirus, in no small part because their portability suited itinerant sheepherding families. Even when you are staying put, this one is well worth making. Its homemade phyllo is rolled out much thicker than the commercial kind, making something more akin to a tender piecrust, and it's imbued with rich flavor from yogurt.

German-Style Potato and Ham Salad

This salad is no bland picnic side dish: Slices of deli ham and bits of salty bacon give it hearty main-course appeal.

Hoisin Chicken in Lettuce Leaves

You can make this superfresh-tasting version of the Chinese takeout classic yourself.

Crab-and-Pork Spring Rolls

Fatty pork is the standout ingredient in these crisp spring rolls; it adds intense flavor and a tender texture to the crab and vegetable filling. Fresh ginger and a generous amount of cilantro add kick.

Cellophane-Noodle Salad with Roast Pork

This noodle salad, studded with slices of sweet mango and crisp cucumber, is a cooling oasis in the midst of a meal packed with rich, spicy dishes. The glazed roast pork gives the salad added dimension, but could also be served on its own.

Hot-and-Sour Soup with Shrimp, Napa Cabbage, and Shiitake Mushrooms

With authentic Asian flavor, this soup is a perfect light supper.

Soy-Glazed Beef Burger

Teriyaki baaga

Grilled Jumbo Shrimp with Lemon and Oregano

The citrusy dressing makes this dish a standout, and there's plenty extra to be sopped up with rice or crusty bread. Cooking shrimp in their shells keeps them juicy and tender. It all makes for casual finger food that requires plenty of napkins — which is part of the fun.

Chicken and Fennel Salad Sandwiches

Roasting the chickens and using both dark and white meat results in chicken salad with deep flavor. (Buying rotisserie chickens will cut down on the timing, but be sure to choose minimally seasoned birds.) Fennel, standing in for the usual celery, along with fennel seed and fresh basil, adds an unexpected note of sophistication.

Salt and Vinegar Potato Salad

If your pulse quickens at the suggestion of salt and vinegar potato chips, you'll be hooked on this warm potato salad after one bite. A little Old Bay seasoning gives it a modest kick.

Scallop Chowder with Bacon

This light chowder with a subtle note of smokiness really lets the scallops shine.

Ginger Pineapple Fried Rice

This riff on traditional fried rice plays the sharp, spicy flavor of ginger off the sweetness of fresh pineapple to delicious effect.

Grilled Shrimp and Vegetables with Pearl Couscous

This riff on traditional pasta salad gets an added layer of flavor from golden pearls of toasted couscous.

Cornish Hens with Roasted-Garlic Aïoli

Roasting the garlic mellows the flavor, which results in an aioli that is less pungent than traditional ones. Besides enhancing the taste of Cornish hens, this makes a perfect accompaniment to vegetables, lamb, and fish, and it's great as a dip.

Grilled Porterhouse Steak with Horseradish Cream

A simple seasoning of salt and pepper leaves this steak ready for an assertive horseradish sauce. It's a great, simple choice for a special occasion.

Nuoc Cham Dipping Sauce

Pleasantly pungent with a touch of heat, this classic spring roll sauce also works well with the chicken satés.

Crispy Spring Rolls

Cha gio are considered culinary treasures, delighting everyone who's tried them. Light and crispy, spring rolls are traditionally wrapped with rice paper. At Lemon Grass, however, we use a more durable type of spring roll wrapper made from wheat flour. Also used for Filipino-style lumpias, they are marketed under the Menlo brand and stocked in the frozen food department of Asian grocery stores. These 8 X 8-inch wrappers seal the filling so well that no oil can seep through during frying; this is not the case with rice paper.

Blatjang

This recipe originally accompanied bobotie. Before we learned to make our own chutney from ingredients as diverse as apricots, dates, quinces and raisins, blatjang was imported from Java, made from sun-dried prawns and shrimps, which were pounded with a wooden pestle and mortar; and shaped into masses resembling large cheeses. Blatjang is the pride of Cape Malay-cuisine, and the recipe is one of the oldest around. The name comes from one of the constituents of the Javanese sambal blachang. Early food writer; C Louis Leipoldt, described it as 'bitingly spicy, pungently aromatic, moderately smooth and a very intimately mixed association of ingredients.' There is nothing quite like blatjang to add zest to curries or braaied meat. Adjust the amount of chilli to suit your preference. Blatjang may be stored for up to a year; but refrigerate once the bottle has been opened.
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