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Asian

Microwave Coconut Sticky Rice With Mango

Make coconut sticky rice in the microwave for creamy, perfectly tender results in under 10 minutes. Serve it with shredded coconut, toasted sesame seeds, and of course, ripe mango slices.

How to Make a Better Cup of Iced Chai

A freshly made, hot cup of chai is spicy and aromatic, creamy and perfectly sweet. But iced chai is almost never all of those things. Learn a better method for making this drink, just in time for summer.

Night + Market Green Papaya Salad

If Thai food were laid out as one of those nutritional pyramids they showed you in health class, green papaya salad would be at the bottom, right above rice. In other words: It is fundamental. 

Marinated Tomatoes

This low-effort, high-flavor tomato demonstrates how the Thai concept of balancing flavors can be achieved in different combinations.

Iced Chai

To make delicious iced chai, finely grind the spices to extract their flavors, then simmer the spices and tea in milk to fully hydrate them.

Sinuglaw (Vinegar-Cured Tuna With Grilled Pork Belly)

Sinuglaw is a combination of fish ceviche—in this case, vinegar-cured tuna—plus smoky grilled pork belly. The flavorful dish gets dressed with coconut milk, ginger, red onion, chiles, and tomato.

Inihaw na Liempo (Grilled Pork Belly)

Pork belly is ubiquitous throughout the Philippines; the fat is glorious and tastes great grilled. Getting a nice char on the fatty bits is important, as it adds another level of flavor to the salty-sour-tart-sweetness of the soy-calamansi marinade.

Pinakurat (Spiced Vinegar)

You can store this all-purpose sweet-and-spicy vinegar in clean mason jars, but it is easier to keep it in repurposed glass bottles. Note that this recipe can be adjusted as you like—try using different chiles or other spices like bay leaf.

Seasoned Fried Peanuts

Add these seasoned peanuts to your som tum.

There’s a Lot More to Masala Chai Than Spiced Milk Tea

Born of colonial rule and Indian resistance, masala chai is more than just spiced milk tea. Epi contributor Leena Trivedi-Grenier traces the legacy of chai—and how Indians turned a tool of oppression into an enduring tradition—then shows you how to brew a great cup.

Fresh Ginger Masala Chai

This masala chai recipe highlights the bright, citrusy and fiery notes of fresh ginger.

Dried Ginger Masala Chai

This milky black tea mixes the sweet spiciness of dried ginger with piney-fruity-minty green cardamom and the brash, earthy heat of black pepper.

How to Make the Crispiest, Fluffiest Yeasted Scallion and Sesame Bing

All you need is a skillet, some scallions, and a handful of pantry staples.

Yeasted Scallion and Sesame Bing (羌 饼, Qiāng Bĭng)

Qiāng bǐng is crispy on the outside, fluffy and chewy on the inside, and truly magical when fresh off the stove.

For the Easiest, Crispiest Fried Garlic, Use Your Microwave

This crunchy, savory topping comes together in a small bowl—and in just a few minutes.

Sticky Rice Balls Three Ways

Shanghainese enjoy rice balls in both sweet and savory preparations. I love both, so I included them here. All Shanghainese buns and pastries have simple identifiers for telling the difference between sweet and savory. Sweet versions are always round and smooth, while savory ones will have a tail hinting at the filling inside.

Spicy Cumin Chicken Heart Skewers

Some people might be afraid of cooking chicken hearts, but they’re not that much different from any cut of dark chicken meat. These morsels of muscle are perfect for grilling: lean, flavorful, with a perfect bouncy bite.

Flowering Chives and Pork Slivers

The crunchiness and juiciness of flowering chives combined with tender, lightly seasoned pork is an unbeatable combination—and this dish is super quick to make.

Kim Chee Peanuts

We took roasted peanuts and coated them with sweet-spicy kochujang, Korean chile flakes, and garlic salt as a topper for the kale and cabbage salad at Tin Roof.

Sohui Kim’s Lunar New Year Menu: Silky Pork Dumplings, Good Luck Soup, and a Big Bowl of Kimchi

The chef and author of Korean Home Cooking shares three recipes that are required for her Lunar Year Year dinner table.
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