Weeknight Meals
Panang Tofu Curry
By Jeanne Thiel Kelley
Scrambled Eggs with Smoked Salmon and Lemon Cream
Be sure to use wild smoked salmon, preferably from Alaska.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Five-Spice Beet Soup
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Shrimp and Fingerlings in Tomato Broth
By Jeanne Thiel Kelley
Bison Burgers with Cabernet Onions and Wisconsin Cheddar
Bison meat is very lean and is best served rare or medium-rare.
By Jeanne Thiel Kelley
Turkey Marsala with Sautéed Spinach
Lean turkey cutlets benefit from a slightly sweet Marsala wine sauce and the twofold richness of prosciutto and Italian Fontina.
By Ian Knauer
Octopus and Potatoes with Olives and Chile
In this rustic marriage of land and sea, red-pepper flakes add just the right amount of heat to hearty potatoes and wonderfully tender octopus (from a can!)
By Melissa Roberts
Inside-Out Eggplant Parmigiana
In the waste-not mentality of Italian cucina povera, panfried patties made with eggs and bread crumbs are a great use for leftover eggplant parmigiana ingredients. In fact, the patties are so incredibly delicious that we made them the crisp showstoppers in this fun reconstruction.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Pea and Bacon Risotto
No need to open a bottle of white wine for the few tablespoons you'd require: Lemon brightens up this easy risotto.
By Ian Knauer
Linguine with Pesto Trapanese
By Amy Bloom and Mama Ruggiero
Broccoli Rabe with Sweet Italian Sausage
No surprises here: The classic combination of bitter greens and sweet sausage is as warming and comforting as the Italian grandmothers who have been making it for generations.
By Tony Oltranti
Broccoli with Orecchiette
In this quick version of a common Puglian dish, pungent garlic and spicy red-pepper flakes turn frozen broccoli into a perfect partner for ear-shaped pasta.
By Ian Knauer
Butternut Squash and Radicchio Pappardelle
Sweet nibbles of butternut squash temper the bitter edge of radicchio in every bite of this healthful, satisfying pasta.
By Melissa Roberts
Fennel, Frisée, and Escarole Salad
This refreshing salad serves as a palate cleanser before dessert. Oltranti updates a traditional Italian-style salad dressing with the modern flavors of California cuisine: Floral Meyer lemon amplifies the acidity of red-wine vinegar in a bright shallot vinaigrette.
By Tony Oltranti
Minted Green Salad
Fresh mint and sliced cucumbers give this American-style salad a lightness that leaves you feeling satisfied, not stuffed.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Hake with Hazelnuts and Capers
Hake, like cod, is mild in flavor yet meaty in texture. Here, it embraces the crunch of sautéed hazelnuts, whose richness is offset by fresh parsley and briny capers.
By Ian Knauer
Winter Caprese Salad
By Lillian Chou
Linguine ai Frutti di Mare
Wake up your taste buds with this lowfat recipe. It is sure to satisfy — and provide a spicy kick!
By Lesley Porcelli
Ferran Adria's Rotisserie Chicken
Pollo con Frutos y Frutas Secas
As this recipe demonstrates, Ferran Adrià, the alchemist chef of El Bulli, is as practical as he is inventive. It's adapted from the cookbook he dedicated to quick recipes that can be made with supermarket ingredients, and it features a store-bought rotisserie chicken that's deliciously doctored with a sauce of dried fruit, pine nuts, and port wine. Though you can whip the dish up in less than half an hour, the flavors are sophisticated enough for a fancy dinner party. If you'd like to roast your own chicken, so much the better.
By Anya von Bremzen
Anchovies in Tomato Sauce with Pasta
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Jamie Oliver's book Jamie's Italy.
Pasta con acchiughe e pomodoro
This is a poor people's pasta from Palermo in Sicily. You could use tagliatelle or spaghetti, but if you can find margherita pasta it's great — it looks thicker than spaghetti, and it's frilly down one edge. This sauce has great flavor and is very Sicilian with the raisins and pine nuts.
P.S., I'd like to thank my mate John Hamilton, the incredible art director on this book, who made this dish with me in Sicily. He made it with such care and concentrated so hard staring at it that I thought it might turn to stone! As you can see from the picture, it goes to show that even a Glaswegian geezer can produce a pretty and delicate dish.
By Jamie Oliver