Soup/Stew
Beef Stew with Potatoes and Carrots
This full-bodied stew will bring the crowd running when you lift the lid. First, pieces of chuck are browned to develop their flavor, then theyre braised in a red-wine beef broth. Adding the potatoes and carrots toward the end of cooking keeps their character and color bright.
By Maggie Ruggiero
Holiday Pork Posole
The pork needs time to cook and chill, so be sure to begin this recipe at least one day ahead. Put out a platter of cornbread (homemade or purchased) along with the posole.
By Tori Ritchie
Farmstand Gazpacho
Try to buy ripe tomatoes or let them ripen in a paper bag with an apple for two days.
By Sheila Lukins
Summer Corn Soup
When corn season is over, this soup is one of the dishes I miss most. I think you'll like cooking the kernel-less cobs with the milk—it's a great way to get every last bit of flavor from the corn.
By Dorie Greenspan
Ratatouille
This recipe calls for a thin, freshly made tomato sauce. Using this sauce will produce the best flavor and texture, but in a pinch you could substitute any plain canned sauce.
By Lou Jones
Chilled Golden Tomato Bisque
A no-cook soup that's as effortless as it is elegant embodies everything we look for in a summer dish. The sweet honey and sharp vinegar are natural extensions of summertime tomatoes' flavor.
By Ruth Cousineau
Turkey Chili
By Melissa Roberts
Carrot Fennel Soup
What a soup. Carrots and fennel caramelize when roasted at high heat, then release their sweet essence when blended. A drizzle of fennel-seed oil echoes and intensifies the fennel flavor.
By Ruth Cousineau
Yellow Gazpacho
Yellow tomatoes bring a touch of sunshine to this delicious chilled soup, which can be made as spicy or as mellow as you like.
Chilled Corn Soup
Simmering the cobs lends depth to a cool essence-of-corn soup, enhanced with a swirl of sour cream and a sprinkling of chives.
By Ian Knauer
Late Summer Tomato Soup with Shell Beans, Squid Rings and Parsley
Be well this fall: Have one bowl and you'll spoon up nearly three quarters of your daily requirement for vitamin C.
By Peter Hoffman
Mussels in Carrot Ginger Broth
This colorful one-pot main dish meshes savory mussels with Asian aromatics for a contemporary take on moules marinière. Bottled fresh carrot juice is a flavorful (and not-to-be-sniffed-at) shortcut.
By Melissa Roberts
Moroccan Style Lamb and Carrots with Chickpea Purée
Il Vino d'Enrico Bernardo, a wine-centric Paris restaurant, features a delicious dish of lamb chops, carrots, and chickpeas with North African spices and black truffles. Skipping the truffles makes it more everyday, but it's still wonderful.
By Melissa Roberts
Lightly Curried Peanut Bisque
By Jean Anderson
White Bean Soup with Duck Confit
Evocative of cassoulet but so much easier, this bean soup manages to be both rugged and elegant. No part of the confit duck legs goes to waste: The bones add savor to the beans, the meat goes into the soup, and the crisped skin makes a delectable garnish. Flambéing the Armagnac before adding it to the pot takes the edge off the alcohol while leaving behind the deep flavor of the barrel.
By Paul Grimes
Butternut Squash Soup with Chestnuts
While eating at one of the coveted counter seats at Les Cocottes, Christian Constant's chic restaurant, food editor Paul Grimes was deeply inspired by the pumpkin soup, which surprised him with savory little chunks of foie gras waiting at the bottom of the bowl. Here, Grimes explores squash's more savory side by cooking it with a touch of tomato and providing that little bit of sweet surprise in the form of chopped chestnut. With just a dollop of whipped cream, it is rich only in looks and spirit—a spoonful will reveal how unbelievably light it is.
By Paul Grimes
Fricassee of Game Hen with Creamy Leeks and Vadoum
This fricassee couldn't be more French, but its velvety sauce carries the flavor of vadouvan, a South Indian spice blend that has started to crop up on Parisian menus. We find it irresistible.
By Paul Grimes