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Coquilles St.-Jacques
Anthony Bourdain
I will always associate the smell of this dish with my first imaginings of France — and with the imminent arrival of guests. When I smelled this dish cooking downstairs, I knew company was coming. My mother made it for special occasions only. I remember being terrifically impressed that she served it in scallop shells. I yearned for this dish — knowing it only by smells — and was delighted when I finally turned old enough to sit down to eat with the adults. This was the reward.
Pink Grapefruit, Strawberry, and Champagne Granita with Sugared Strawberries
Use a Microplane grater or the smallest holes on a box grater to remove the lemon peel in thin, fine pieces. Any delicate buttery cookies — such as pirouettes, small shortbreads, or tender madeleines — would be delicious with the granita.
Margarita Cheesecake
Made with reduced-fat cream cheese and light sour cream, this cheesecake is irresistible — just like its namesake cocktail.
By Betty Rosbottom
Bittersweet Chocolate Waffles with Chocolate Chip Ice Cream
Depending on the size and shape of your waffle pan, the yield for this recipe will vary. Freeze extra waffles to enjoy later. Karen Barker makes her own chocolate sauce and chocolate chip ice cream with cherries.
By Karen Barker
Pineapple-Cardamom Upside-Down Cake
This cake, thought to have first appeared in the 1920s, has had such names as pineapple glacé and pineapple skillet cake.
Gramercy Tavern Gingerbread
The use of leavening in a cake is first recorded in a recipe for gingerbread from Amelia Simmons's American Cookery, published in Hartford in 1796; I guess you could say it is the original great American cake. Early-19th-century cookbooks included as many recipes for this as contemporary cookbooks do for chocolate cake. This recipe, from Claudia Fleming, pastry chef at New York City's Gramercy Tavern, is superlative—wonderfully moist and spicy.
By Claudia Fleming
Chinese Chicken and Rice Porridge (Congee)
Also known as jook, congee turns up in Chinese households morning, noon, and night. This thick rendition is made heartier with the addition of chicken.
Rum Raisin French Toast
By R. A. Street
Valentine Chocolate-Cherry Ice Cream Bombe
Impressive—and a breeze to put together. The bombe is just a layering of purchased ice cream, sorbet and cookies, and it's topped off with a store-bought fudge sauce spruced up with chocolate chips and brandy. For Valentine's Day, dress up the dessert even more with chocolate curls and maraschino cherries. Begin preparing this a day ahead.
Veal Prince Orloff
In this classic French dish, a veal roast is sliced and layered with a combination of soubise (onion) and duxelles (mushroom) stuffings, then put back together in the shape of the roast. Traditionally, it's covered with more stuffing and heavily coated with a Mornay sauce (which glazes the roast as it's heated in the oven). In our updated version, we keep the soubise and duxelles separate and arrange them side by side — black contrasting with white — on each veal slice, so the stuffings are visible. We use only a very thin coating of Mornay to glaze the dish, and serve the rest on the side.
Japanese Beef Stew
Trimming all corners and ragged edges from the carrots and potatoes is very Japanese; rounded edges also ensure even cooking. In Japan we used metal molds to cut our carrots into plum blossoms for a seasonal motif.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 1 1/2 hr
Grilled Tri-Tip Roast with Tequila Marinade and Cherry Tomato Relish
Marinate the tri-tip for at least two hours.
Blood Orange Jelly with Brandied Whipped Cream
By Deborah Madison
Chicken with White Wine and Mushrooms
By Peggy Markel
Chocolate Snowball Cake
To create the dome shape, bake this flourless chocolate cake in a foil-lined bowl. The cake is crusty outside with a tender center: rich, fudgy and irresistible. And it's a great addition to your holiday table.
By Kathleen Hulsy
Bread Pudding Soufflé with Whiskey Sauce
When I eat Bread Pudding Soufflé I always think of the Commander's saying, "If it ain't broke, fix it anyway." Bread pudding was already near perfection, but we combined Creole bread pudding with the light texture of a meringue and ended up with the restaurant's signature dessert, the single most sought-after dish in our family's restaurant history. The whiskey sauce itself is divine but particularly so when generously poured over the piping hot soufflé. Take it from me, this is no light dessert. Make the bread pudding and the sauce in advance, the meringue just before assembling and baking.
By Jamie Shannon