- * 1 pint sour cream
- * 2 tablespoons butter
- * 1 teaspoon salt
- * 1/2 teaspoon pepper
- * 2 tablespoons milk
- milk
- finely chopped cauliflower
- minced garlic
- salt
- Tiny pinch cayenne pepper
- cornstarch
- sherry wine
- eggs
- cherry tomatoes
- pitted Kalamata olives
- olive oil
- salt
- red chili flakes
- chopped fresh basil
- olive oil
- ground black pepper
- olive oil
- ground black pepper
- Hot curry powder
- Tamarind paste
- Olive oil
- Water and salt
“We vinegar fans love this sweet-and-sour coleslaw recipe – it uses vinegar, not mayonnaise, to bind it.
- sugar
- cider vinegar
- celery seed
- turmeric
- slat
- vegetable oil
- water
“This side dish makes four servings; it’s perfect to keep in your fridge to add to stir-fries or pasta dishes. Use as many different mushrooms as you can find, especially the healthier varieties like shiitake, enoki and oyster mushrooms. The dried porcini or cepes really add a lot of flavor. You’ll find them in little packages near the produce stands.
- herb and spice blend
- organic baby spinach leaves
“Mung beans are small dried green beans with yellow flesh. Like all beans, they’re rich in protein, calcium, phosphorus and iron, but they’re mainly grown for sprouting. Mung bean sprouts have long been a familiar ingredient in many Asian dishes. Traditional Chinese medicine maintains that mung beans have a “heat-clearing, toxin-resolving” effect that eases conditions such as diarrhea and painful swelling."
- fresh mung bean sprouts
- canola oil
- finely chopped fresh gingerroot
- light brown sugar
- Salt to taste
- rice vinegar
“Beets are a colorful source of anthocyanins, the purple pigments also found in blueberries, red grapes and red cabbage. They are powerful antioxidants and may help protect against cancer and heart disease. This dish brings to mind pickled beets with a grown-up slant. It keeps well in the refrigerator.”
- beets
- brown sugar
- rice or cider vinegar
- water
- dry mustard powder
- extra-virgin olive oil
- Salt to
- taste