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Easy

Pan-Roasted Sea Bass with Citrus and Avocado Oil

Delicately flavored avocado oil can lose its personality when heated; pour a touch of the oil over food just before serving.

Old Pal

When we're not drinking Manhattans, we'll take an Old Pal. Usually made with rye, we prefer it with bourbon (the higher the proof, the better).

Southern Mac and Cheese

American cheese gives this classic from Arnold's its melty consistency.

Shaved Cauliflower and Radicchio Salad

Chopped walnuts nicely complement the rich walnut oil in the dressing.

Rosemary Honey

Tie 3 rosemary sprigs together with kitchen twine and use as a brush to slather this fragrant honey over everything from biscuits to chicken.

Wilted Escarole with Country Ham and Chiles

A bit of salty country ham goes a long way in this quick greens sauté.

Roasted Potatoes and Haddock Puttanesca

Puttanesca isn't just for pasta. Anchovies and olives punch up a sauce hearty enough to stand up to meat or fish.

Rosa Mae

This sweet-tea cocktail from the Patterson House includes lime juice and honey for a modern front-porch favorite.

Mustard Caviar

Chocolate-Stout Brownies

A rich dose of stout adds big flavor to these fudgy, chocolate-glazed brownies.

Red Leaf Salad with Roasted Beets, Oranges, and Walnuts

A&M: Teresa wrote: "Seems to me beets and oranges are a classic winter salad combination that you see everywhere." But this is no run-of-the-mill beet and orange salad. Teresa explained, "My friend Sophie's dad, Jim Broderick, gave me the idea that really makes this salad great: fennel and orange rind in the dressing." She's right: this trick gives her winter salad lift and fragrance and makes you want to keep eating it.

Pink Greens

A&M: This may be the most thoughtful sautéed greens recipe we've ever encountered. Beet greens (we agree with Marissa Grace that they deserve more attention in the kitchen) are usually wilted in hot olive oil with a little garlic, and they're delicious this way, but Marissa Grace plotted out ways to amplify the greens’ sweetness while tempering it with chiles. She has you brown garlic with shallot and red pepper flakes, then layer in sugar, black pepper, and salt before adding the greens and wilting them. Just before serving, you splash the beet greens with sherry vinegar, which electrifies the whole dish. The key here is the sugar, which caramelizes with the garlic and tightens up the sauce, so by the time the greens are cooked (and beet greens really should be cooked), it wraps them in a cloak of sweet and fiery sauce.

French "Peasant" Beets

A&M: When Amy N-B told her husband that she came up with this dish as an homage to a simple French peasant dinner, he teased her: "What peasants eat Bucheron cheese and drink Muscadet with their beets?" "Um, French ones?" Well, in our next life, we'd like to be French peasants, or at least eat like them. We have a soft spot for beet recipes that utilize both the sweet root and minerally tops. Here, Amy N-B has you caramelize slices of yellow and red beets (we used four large beets total; might do three next time) and then add a mix of beet tops and Swiss chard, cooking them just enough to wilt. You'll love the dish at this point, but you'll be riveted if you serve it with a soft Bucheron and good country bread.

Black Bean Nachos

This dip is a perennial hit. The last time I made it guests practically licked the bowl.

Roasted Mushrooms with Spicy Breadcrumbs

On their own, roasted mushrooms are golden, buttery, and delicious, but we've gone a step further and jazzed them up by showering them with a blanket of crunchy, chile-flecked breadcrumbs.

Tuscan Porterhouse Steak with Red Wine-Peppercorn Jus

A porterhouse is the perfect steak for two to share because it contains good-sized portions of two of the most prized muscles in a steer, each located on either side of the center bone. The top loin, the larger of the two, is the same piece of gorgeous meat as that steakhouse staple, the New York strip. The tenderloin, attached to the other side of the bone, may be smaller, but it's a much larger portion (technically, it has to be 1 1/4-inches in diameter) than you get in a T-bone steak. If you can find dry aged, try it. It's a bit more expensive but yields more tender and flavorful meat. We pan-roast the steak with the Tuscan stalwarts of garlic, rosemary, and thyme, then serve it with a velvety red wine reduction.

Sriracha Buffalo Sauce

This is part of the recipe Chicken Wings Five Ways.

Spicy Coconut Curry Sauce

This is part of the recipe Chicken Wings Five Ways.

Balsamic Hoisin Sauce

This is part of the recipe Chicken Wings Five Ways.

Lemon Pepper Garlic Vinaigrette

This is part of the recipe Chicken Wings Five Ways.
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