Dill
Cucumber Salad with Radish and Dill
This salad tastes best up to 1 hour after making it. To make ahead store the salad components separately (up to 3 hours), and toss before serving.
Sole with Vegetables and Dijon Dill Sauce
A citrusy aroma will fill your kitchen as fish fillets and a variety of vegetables bake in foil packets. Spoon on the sauce and enjoy!
Ranch Dressing with Fresh Herbs
Fresh dillweed and parsley perk up this low-salt version of a classic.
Dilled Summer Squash
With this recipe, you don’t need to buy many ingredients or spend much time in the kitchen to get a colorful and tasty side dish.
Yogurt Dill Sauce
Serve this easy sauce over fish, use it as a dip for raw vegetables, or spoon it over sliced cucumbers.
Easy Dill Pickles
Even if you’ve never made pickles before, don’t hesitate to try this recipe. It is so easy! Just let the cucumbers simmer in a flavorful liquid, then cool and refrigerate them. The flavor of these pickles really brightens lean grilled burgers or your favorite potato salad or tuna salad recipe.
Lemon-Dill Chicken and Rice Soup with Carrots and Asparagus
Fresh asparagus and dill turn this soup into a flavorful celebration of spring.
Horseradish and Dill Sour Cream Dip
Adding horseradish to sour cream and dill gives you a dip with zip!
Succulent Smoked Salmon
This was the first dish I learned to cook on the Big Green Egg, at the masterful hands of Ray Lampe, aka Dr. BBQ. This recipe yields a very succulent, lightly cooked, smoky fish. It calls for salmon, but any seasonal fish such as halibut or even trout can be substituted. I like to keep the seasoning to a minimum so the flavor of the fresh fish comes through. If you choose to add more herbs to your version, dried herbs work best. Adding fruit wood chips to the hot coals contributes another layer of flavor. I like apple wood best for maintaining a sweet flavor. Serve with lightly dressed baby greens.
Plank-Roasted Pacific Salmon
This recipe from award-winning cookbook author John Ash features plank roasting, an old technique used by the Northwest Indians who tied or nailed salmon to cedar or alder planks and tilted them over an open fire to cook. The cure in this recipe flavors the fish and acts as a brine to keep it moist.
Tied-Up Trout
Trout is a popular fish in a landlocked state like Tennessee. It’s fresh, easy, and quick to cook on a grill or in the oven. The presentation of a whole fish at home conjures up the rustic feel of a riverbank campout, and the burnt string used to lash together the lemon-and-dill-stuffed fish creates a real dinner-under-the-stars mood. Complete the faux angler’s mess with Oven Potatoes (page 167) and a green salad with your own smoked paprika vinaigrette.
Towers of Bagel Toasts, Smoked Salmon, and Herbs
When we have a lot of people over for brunch, I love serving my version of a New York classic. Each person can easily pick up a stack—only half a bagel—from a tower and not get full on too much bread. You can even cut each tower into quarters so your guests can pick up a bite. I like using H&H poppy seed bagels, but feel free to substitute your favorite bagel.
Herbed Spinach and Three-Cheese Pizza
Fresh spinach and cheese is one of my favorite combinations. Here, the blast of the heat from the oven wilts the greens into the melted cheese. To brighten the flavors, I toss in a bunch of fresh herbs, too. If you have a pizza oven or stone at home, use it here. It’ll char the edges of the leaves and make them crisp.
Tri-Color Sweet and Tangy Peppers
This is an appetizing small side salad to serve when colorful bell peppers are plentiful. It goes well with pastas as well as grain dishes.