Vegetable
Fettuccine With Asparagus, Beet Green Pesto, and Poached Egg
Puréeing beet greens into pesto and tossing asparagus ribbons with fettuccine is a great way to incorporate healthy vegetables into pasta.
By Jill Santopietro
Roasted Carrots with Fennel-Brown Butter
Naturally sweet carrots are perfectly balanced by a nutty, fragrant brown butter. If you can't find carrots with tops, substitute 2 Tbsp. coarsely chopped fresh parsley.
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Frittata With Fennel-Spiced Pork and Asparagus
Served warm or at room temperature, a frittata makes for an easy yet impressive dinner. If you are following our $68 Dinner Story, buy 1 bunch asparagus and use 3/4 bunch for the Fettuccine with Asparagus, Beet Green Pesto, and Poached Egg and the remaining 1/4 bunch here. This is the perfect opportunity to use up any leftover beet green pesto from the pasta dish as well.
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Radish and Carrot Salad with Tuna and Capers
The thinly sliced radishes and carrots in this healthy lunch salad get extra crispy, thanks to a quick soak in an ice bath.
By Jill Santopietro
Sautéed Greens with Toasted Walnuts
Toasted walnuts add a rich nuttiness to earthy greens. If you are following our $68 Dinner Story, use the reserved beet and Swiss chard greens and remaining chard stems from the Roasted Beet Salad with Flash-Pickled Radishes and Chard .
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Beet Risotto
This is an elegant risotto that's fairly straightforward, though a bit messy if you're using red beets. Yellow or red, the color is spectacular and the taste will have those averse to eating beets rethinking the root. If you are following our $68 Dinner Story, reserve the greens from the beets for the Fettuccine with Asparagus, Beet Green Pesto, and Poached Egg .
By Jill Santopietro
Roasted Chicken Thighs with White Beans, Lemon, and Capers
Chicken thighs are an inexpensive and delicious alternative to chicken breasts. This one-pan dinner is perfect for a weeknight because it's so simple to put together and cleanup is a breeze.
By The Epicurious Test Kitchen
Coconut Soba Noodles with Ginger Broccoli
By Catherine McCord
Hummus Veggie Wraps
By Catherine McCord
Vegetarian Spring Rolls
By Catherine McCord
Benedictine Sandwiches
By Catherine McCord
Our Favorite Spaghetti and Meatballs
Want to show someone you really care? Make them our ultimate spaghetti and meatballs.
By Rhoda Boone
Greek Nachos
By Catherine McCord
How to Make Chef Ed Lee's Spicy Grilled Cheese
Soups, dipping sauces, and, yes, and insanely delicious grilled cheese. Is there anything gochujang can't do?
By Matt Duckor
How to Buy and Store Garlic
Garlic. Everyone uses it, but do you know the right ways to buy and store it?
By Sheela Prakash
How to Cook Vegetables That Taste Better Than a Burger
Don't peel your beets, always squeeze some lemon, and other genius advice from a chef who loves vegetables as much as meat.
By JJ Goode
Gochujang Gazpacho
By Edward Lee
Seared Kale Salad with Brown Butter-Toasted Pine Nuts and Smoked Bacon
This salad is the answer to people who think they don't like leafy greens. Good kale has a deep, almost meaty flavor. Searing it and mixing it with brown-butter-drenched pine nuts, sweet raisins, and salty Parmesan cheese is a no-fail treatment. Most other hearty greens like beet greens, dandelion greens, or radish tops would also be good in this dish.
By Ithai Schori and Chris Taylor
Snap Pea Salad
I admit that I'm hard on sugar snap peas. I get disappointed when they suck, of course, but I also get grumpy when they're anything less than perfect—unblemished, super sweet, and not a bit starchy. That's the curse of keeping high standards, I suppose: you're so rarely satisfied. When at last I do find perfect snap peas, I make this salad. I leave them raw—only the finest snap peas can be this delightful without a dunk in boiling water—and accentuate their flavor with little more than a lemony dressing and mint. If you'd like, you could add some creamy goat cheese in blobs or good old burrata alongside.
By April Bloomfield
The Secret Ingredient Your Tomato Sauce May Be Missing
It's a little controversial, but all the most balanced tomato sauces have sugar—sometimes naturally, sometimes not.
By Sheela Prakash