Oven Bake
Salty-Savory-Spicy Snack Mix
Fair warning: This snack mix is so good it'll definitely ruin your appetite for dinner. In fact, we predict that you will find yourself making it often because you won't want to run out.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Roman Style Pizza with Roasted Cherry Tomatoes
Roll or stretch the dough as thin as possible to get a classic thin and crispy crust.
By Sarah Tenaglia and Selma Morrow
Baked Whole Fish with Potatoes and Lemon
This recipe comes from Rosita Missoni's Sardinian fish merchant, who recommends using a large flat white fish such as turbot, fluke, or halibut. You can substitute a firm-fleshed round fish such as branzino or black sea bass. Serve the fish flaked off the bone with the potatoes and a simple arugula and tomato salad.
By Rosita Missoni
Sausage Rolls
By Darren McGrady
Lemon-Roasted Potatoes
By Michael Symon
Almond-Apricot Chicken with Mint Pesto
The addition of goat cheese, apricots, and pesto lends a Mediterranean flavor to chicken. The pesto is made with fresh mint and almonds, rather than the usual basil and pine nuts.
Yukon Gold Potato Chips with White Anchovy
These potato chips will intrigue your guests. As the chips bake, the anchovy melts into the potato for an intense one-bite amuse. While no one would want to eat a bowl of these chips, a single one packs a flavor punch. I was inspired to make these by David Bouley, the brilliant chef-owner of Bouley Bakery and Danube in New York, who was a guest chef at Tru soon after it opened in 1999. He wove an anchovy between potato slices and fried them. I was hooked and had to develop my own method, which is to thread a white anchovy through slits in a potato slice and then bake the chips in a hot oven until lightly browned. If you can't find white anchovies, use the familiar dark anchovies instead.
By Rick Tramonto
Warm Onion Tart with Thyme
These little warm onion tarts are lovely amuse and get any winter meal off to a good start. Vary them with different kinds of onions. Julia Child has commented that cooking would be in a sorry state indeed if it weren't for onions. I agree!
By Rick Tramonto
Chicken Breasts with Goat Cheese and Fire-Roasted Tomatoes
This dish is exceptionally easy to make and worth every second. That said, there is one thing to note: Be careful when checking the chicken for doneness. The tomatoes will likely drip into the chicken. If you cut into the chicken or poke it with a fork to test for doneness, be sure it’s not the liquid from the tomatoes making the chicken look pink even if it’s not.
By Devin Alexander
Polenta Gnocchi in Tomato Sauce
You can serve polenta in its most traditional form, but you can also use it to create an easy variation on gnocchi. I first learned this technique from my friend, Milan-born and-raised cooking teacher Nadia Frigieri. Making both the polenta and the sauce in a slow cooker means there’s little hands-on effort required to make this stunning dish. Adding a green salad makes this a meal.
By Lynn Alley
Carnitas: Braised and Fried Pork
Editor's note: Chef Roberto Santibañez, the chef/owner of Fonda in Brooklyn, New York shared this recipe as part of a festive taco party menu he created for Epicurious. To make tacos, you'll also need 24 to 32 warm corn tortillas, 2 cups of salsa, chopped white onion, chopped cilantro, and lime wedges. Santibañez recommends serving the tacos with Fresh Tomato Salsa , Roasted Pineapple Salsa , or Taco-Shop Guacamole, a blend of avocado and tomatillos.
Picture this: Mounds of juicy, tender, crispy-edged pieces of pork just waiting to be tucked into freshly made tortillas or piled on a plate along with rice and beans. This recipe is the classic way to make them—well, almost. Many restaurants and stalls put a whole butchered pig in a huge copper pot and let it simmer away until any liquid has evaporated. That's when the pork goes from being braised to being fried, browning in its own luscious fat. I do the same thing here, except I suggest using pork shoulder instead of the whole animal. And while the pork is traditionally browned on the stovetop, doing it in the oven is even easier and more effective. Pile the result on tortillas with salsa, chopped onions, and cilantro.
By Roberto Santibañez and JJ Goode
Stuffed Portobello Mushrooms
By Harley Pasternak, M.Sc. and Laura Moser
Mini Macaroni Pies
When Jack’s cousin Baby Lizzie first started picking up food and feeding herself, we started making macaroni and cheese in mini muffin pans for her. Big cousin Jack likes to take a large bite, so for him regular muffin pans fit the bill. You can make these in either one. The crispy Ritz cracker crumbs on the outside form a little crust for these pies, making them perfect to eat with your hands. We’re not saying they will be much neater than regular mac and cheese, but these sure are fun and delicious.
By Jamie Deen , Bobby Deen , and Melissa Clark
Sriracha Salt
This salt is great for rimming a tasty Srirachelada or a frosty margarita. I also like to put a few flakes on my steaks just before serving for added punch. Try sprinkling some over popcorn, French fries, fresh avocado, hard-boiled eggs, or edamame. Or, if you're feeling really adventurous, dust a couple of grains on top of decadent chocolate truffles.
By Randy Clemens
Chicken and Sausage Jambalaya
By Anna Beth and Vince Chao
Moroccan-Spiced Pastitsio with Lamb and Feta
This multi-culti recipe brings a moroccan flavor (the spice blend ras-el-hanout) to pastitsio, the classic Greek pasta dish.
By Rozanne Gold
Lasagna with Turkey Sausage Bolognese
By Rozanne Gold
Roasted Cauliflower with Cheddar Cheese Sauce
Chef Cathal Armstrong of Restaurant Eve in Alexandria, Virginia, shared this recipe as part of a St. Patrick's Day feast he created exclusively for Epicurious. Armstrong says, "Kids go mad for this super-easy side dish"—so it's a great way to get your little ones to eat their veggies.
Eggs Derby
This may be the most decadent recipe in the entire collection—all good things baked into one dish so creative and rich that making it causes the cook to chuckle periodically at the luxury and process. Don't wait for Derby Day.
By Kathy Cary
Eggplant, Oyster, and Tasso Gratin
You are, no doubt, familiar with the so-called trinity of Louisiana cookery: onions, celery, and bell pepper. Susan Spicer of New Orleans, a self-described eggplant freak who cooks in an internationally inflected Creole style, has honed a new sort of trinity: eggplant, oysters, and tasso.
Here, tasso, an intensely flavored smoked pork of Cajun origin, serves as a seasoning, in the same way that a smoked pig trotter flavors a pot of greens. Although Spicer recommends that you serve scoops of this gratin as an appetizer, consider yourself warned: We have done the same. And no matter what we served to follow, it paled in comparison. Your guests might be happier with a large helping of this Creolized casserole and a salad.
Here, tasso, an intensely flavored smoked pork of Cajun origin, serves as a seasoning, in the same way that a smoked pig trotter flavors a pot of greens. Although Spicer recommends that you serve scoops of this gratin as an appetizer, consider yourself warned: We have done the same. And no matter what we served to follow, it paled in comparison. Your guests might be happier with a large helping of this Creolized casserole and a salad.
By Susan Spicer