Oven Bake
Farfalle and Tuna Casserole
Here's an all-new tuna-noodle casserole; just add a salad of arugula and sliced oranges. Dessert might be big spice cookies sandwiched with vanilla ice cream.
Spinach Parmesan Custard with Frico
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 1 1/2 hr (not including frico)
Test your springform pan with water for leakage before getting started. If it leaks, tightly wrap the bottom and halfway up the side of the pan with two layers of foil before filling it.
Sweet Potato, Apple, and Sage Spoon Bread
This moist spoon bread (a pudding-like bread made with cornmeal) tastes best warm.
Candied Curried Pecans
These sweet and spicy nuts — which go great with drinks — would make a nice hostess gift.
Warm Goat Cheese Toasts with Rosemary, Walnuts, and Honey
To set a festive mood, serve these with mimosas made with icy-cold Prosecco and freshly squeezed tangerine juice.
Fillet of Trout with Tomato
Truite à la Tomate
This trout recipe could be page 1 of [fishmonger Neige] Perez's Workbook for Cooking Fish 101. There are no fish bones to fillet, no tomatoes to peel, and no saucepans to clean. Cooked together in a single roasting pan, the capers, olives, onions, tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, white wine, and trout fillets conspire to create a wonderful, unmistakably Mediterranean ensemble sure to entice even Marseillais who were scaling and gutting fish — or so they say — before they could walk.
By Daniel Young
Cuban-Style Roast Suckling Pig
In Cuba, this dish is traditionally served on New Year's Day. In this tradition, as in the Hawaiian luau, the pig is usually covered with banana leaves and cooked over a coal fire in a pit that's dug in the backyard. Because this method is not easy to do at home, the recipe below uses a small suckling pig that will fit in the oven, yet deliver the same delicious flavor. Ask your butcher to split the pig for you. Don't be afraid to give this recipe a try — cooking a whole small pig is like cooking a whole turkey.
By Douglas Rodriguez
Pâté de Campagne
(COUNTRY TERRINE)
My local butcher, Mr. Delasalle, wouldn't part with his terrine recipe, though he gave me plenty of hints. What follows is a recipe that closely replicates his.
By Susan Herrmann Loomis
Eggs Baked in Pipérade
Piperade, a saucy tomato and pepper mixture from the Basque regions of France and Spain, is often paired with eggs.
Gorgonzola, Pears and Walnuts on Baguette
By Ira Freehof
Skillet Polenta with Tomatoes and Gorgonzola
Serve with: Romaine salad with creamy Italian dressing, and steamed Broccolini. Dessert: Lemon gelato topped with sliced figs and Marsala.
Chestnut Spoon Bread with Fontina Cheese
Whole roasted chestnuts (now conveniently packed ready-to-use in jars) and creamy Fontina cheese enrich this take on a classic southern bread.
Sauteed Chicken with Hominy Casserole
Hominy was as common on the table when I was growing up as rice is today. It is not used too much anymore but is still readily available in some regions, particularly in the south. You can buy it in cans or loose, sold in bulk, and sometimes you can find it in health-food stores and packaged alongside the other grains in the supermarket. The brand I buy is Monte Blanco or Goya. I have found that Spanish brands are more tasty. After you have opened the can, wash the hominy 3 or more times with cold water and drain well. This removes the taste of the liquid it soaked in. Hominy is dried, hulled whole kernels of corn; grits are finely ground hominy. Usually hominy is boiled and served hot for breakfast, plain or with gravy. Because I think it is a little like tiny dumplings, I like to cook it with sautéed chicken so that the juices from the chicken and the vegetables can mingle with the hominy.
By Edna Lewis
Chive Tartines with Smoked Salmon
In France, tartines are slices of bread topped with butter and sometimes cheese, honey, or other spreads. Here that simple idea is turned into a sophisticated appetizer when the bread is brushed with chive oil and topped with smoked salmon and goat cheese.