Oven Bake
Corn and Cheese Soft Tacos
Sliced avocado and purchased salsa are great additions to this Tex-Mex entrée. Let guests assemble their own tacos.
By Lisa A. Wilson
Zucchini Gratin
By Danielle Brackett
Chicken and Mushroom Enchiladas
By Stephanie Coon
Golden Gratin
This not-too-sweet potato dish is reminiscent of tzimmes, a traditional sweet potato, carrot and short rib stew. Using a four-millimeter slicing blade in processor makes the preparation a snap.
Sea Bass with Sherry Vinegar Glaze and Mushroom Sauté
By Joseph Gogolinski
Beef-Short Ribs Tagine with Honey-Glazed Butternut Squash
Teamed with meats of all kinds in Moroccan cooking, dried fruits and honey impart flavor and sweetness to the sauce in this rich stew. Serve it with a Cabernet Sauvignon.
Garlic-Roasted Chicken Breasts
You won't want to miss a bit of the wonderfully aromatic sauce, so serve either the Smashed Yukon Gold Potatoes or plenty of French bread to catch every drop. Round out the menu with buttered carrots, a spinach and toasted walnut salad with walnut oil vinaigrette, and mocha layer cake for dessert.
Spinach, Beet and Walnut Salad
Food writer Janet Fletcher says, "During my childhood, the only salad on the Thanksgiving buffet was an old-fashioned Waldorf with chopped apples, celery, walnuts and mayonnaise. Frankly, I don’t miss it. This contemporary salad has the walnuts and the crunch, but is much fresher and far more inviting."
By Janet Fletcher
Sausage, Chestnut and Fig Stuffing
Serve this stuffing alongside your Christmas turkey, ham, goose or duck. Add an extra dose of chestnuts to your meal by offering the Brussels Sprouts with Chestnuts and Bacon.
Fish and Vegetables with Pesto Baked in Foil Packets
By Judy Harmon
Finnish Barley Pudding
The Finns rely on cereal as one of the mainstays of their diet, since barley, rye and buckwheat grow well in their country. The barley pudding is a good substitute for potatoes, noodles or rice.
By Nika Standen Hazelton
Crabmeat Martin
Joe Martin was both a hero and a mentor to me. He was an old-fashioned New Orleans kitchen guy who never had national fame as a chef, but he could cook better than a lot of household names. Not only that, he was a great teacher, developing an army of everyday workers who were the backbone of good food served all over town. The funny thing is, for all the people he taught, he never wrote down his best dishes. He used to make this one hunched over like it was a big secret. I pieced the recipe together from some of the guys he taught. Joe, if you're looking down on this dish from someplace where the work isn't so hard, I hope you don't think we're leaving something out!
By Andrew Jaeger and John DeMers
Vegetable Moussaka
Although it would be years before most Greek cooking would become familiar to Americans, one Greek dish, moussaka, did catch on in the seventies.