Dried Fruit
Ferran Adria's Rotisserie Chicken
Pollo con Frutos y Frutas Secas
As this recipe demonstrates, Ferran Adrià, the alchemist chef of El Bulli, is as practical as he is inventive. It's adapted from the cookbook he dedicated to quick recipes that can be made with supermarket ingredients, and it features a store-bought rotisserie chicken that's deliciously doctored with a sauce of dried fruit, pine nuts, and port wine. Though you can whip the dish up in less than half an hour, the flavors are sophisticated enough for a fancy dinner party. If you'd like to roast your own chicken, so much the better.
By Anya von Bremzen
Anchovies in Tomato Sauce with Pasta
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Jamie Oliver's book Jamie's Italy.
Pasta con acchiughe e pomodoro
This is a poor people's pasta from Palermo in Sicily. You could use tagliatelle or spaghetti, but if you can find margherita pasta it's great — it looks thicker than spaghetti, and it's frilly down one edge. This sauce has great flavor and is very Sicilian with the raisins and pine nuts.
P.S., I'd like to thank my mate John Hamilton, the incredible art director on this book, who made this dish with me in Sicily. He made it with such care and concentrated so hard staring at it that I thought it might turn to stone! As you can see from the picture, it goes to show that even a Glaswegian geezer can produce a pretty and delicate dish.
By Jamie Oliver
Pecan-Raisin Drop Cookies
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Foie Gras with Date Purée and Pomegranate
In these spectacular cocktail-ring-proportioned bites, the date purée gives surprising depth to the silky richness of foie gras. Add pomegranate seeds—a gorgeous garnet crown—for a burst of sour-sweet juice and a little crunch.
By Paul Grimes
Spotted Dick
Steamed raisin pudding, or spotted dick, as it's also called, is a traditional English dessert cake that is steamed instead of baked. It can be portioned into 8 ramekins or steamed in a large bowl and turned out as a whole cake. If you're using the ramekins, rather than spooning in the batter, you may want to transfer it to a large pastry bag and pipe it in—this will keep things neat and produce evenly proportioned cakes.
By Lou Jones
Pork Roast with Winter Fruits and Port Sauce
Ever dream about bringing an impressive roast to the holiday table with equally impressive ease? Now you can. Stuffing and preparing the pork a day ahead leaves you free to entertain and makes the meat especially flavorful as well. Bacon wrapped around the roast keeps it moist as it cooks. Prunes and dried apricots simmered in Port bring a fruity but not overly sweet intensity to the pork and its sauce.
By Ruth Cousineau
Apricot Chutney
This recipe originally accompanied Curried Lamb Samosas with Apricot Chutney .
By Andrew Friedman
Cranberry Pistachio Biscotti
For chewy texture, undercook the biscotti slightly in the second baking.
By Francois Payard
Honey Almond Granola
Theres nothing quite like making your own granola. You can toss in as many nuts and fruits as you want and sweeten it to your taste. While the possibilities are endless, we love this honey-sweetened variation with sesame seeds. The cardamom clings to the almonds, dried apricots and pears, and oats, adding an exotic touch.
By Melissa Roberts
Apple Chutney
Applesauce goes global in a chutney spiced with ginger and red-pepper flakes. Tart Granny Smiths and sweet Galas are cut into chunks, giving this topping a firm bite. Fabulous over potato latkes, its also delicious with zucchini latkes .
By Paul Grimes
Let's Make a Date Muffins
These muffins are inspired by a favorite dessert: sticky toffee pudding. But they are revamped for breakfast and renamed with hope that as you present your beloved with a plate of these, you'll be invited to open your Filofax and check on next Friday night.
By Anne Bramley
Clay Pot Chicken with Dates, Sucuk and Bulgur
In Turkish cookery there's a distinctive group of dishes known as güveç, which take their name from the earthenware pot in which they are cooked—in the same way that the tagine does in Morocco. In rural Anatolia the cooking pots may be sealed and buried in the ashes of a fire to cook slowly overnight—or, only slightly less romantically, in the local baker's oven. If you don't have a clay pot, a heavy-based cast-iron casserole dish will serve almost as well.
Güveç dishes encompass all sorts of meat or poultry cooked with legumes, vegetables and fruits. My addition of star anise is not remotely Turkish, but it adds a wonderful layer of aniseed flavor. This güveç is spicy with a lingering sweetness, so serve it with a light salad or braised wild greens. A dollop of yogurt would also be delicious.
Sucuk is a spicy Turkish sausage and can be found in Turkish or Middle Eastern butchers and some specialist delis.
By Greg Malouf and Lucy Malouf
Christmas Gallete
The best flavors of fruitcake baked into a tart thats a balance of sweet, tangy, and buttery.
By Dorie Greenspan
Old-fashioned Fruitcake Cookies
Every year, I make homemade fruitcakes for friends and family. I bake the dense pound cakes studded with dried fruits months in advance, then wrap them in muslin. These cookies are similar to my fruitcakesonly theyll take you a lot less time. For a fun presentation, the cookies are baked in bonbon-size baking cups.
By Damon Lee Fowler
Red Mullet Fillets with Haricots Verts and Dried Apricots
Filets de Rouget et Haricots Verts Sauté aux Fruits Secs
Highly prized for its firm, mild flesh, red mullet is a darling of French and Mediterranean chefs. Here, it sits on a splendid textural bed of haricots verts, dried apricots, and pine nuts.
By Stéphane Chevassus
Woodland Bundles
Regardless of your foraging skills, you can experience the abundance of the woods with these delectable parcels, which combine the nutty chew of bulgur with rich toasted pine nuts, sweet currants, and smoky trout that could have come from a nearby brook—all neatly wrapped up in a lettuce leaf. And because they're so portable, you can easily enjoy them outdoors on a picnic blanket.
By Ian Knauer
Date Relish
By Jean Thiel Kelley and Martin Kelley
Chocolate Chunks with Cherries and Pistachios
You thought chocolate was good? Try chocolate with cherries and pistachios. Heaven!
By Katie Brown
Prune, Cherry, and Apricot Frangipane Tart
When steeped overnight in a grappa syrup, dried fruits plump up with juices that infuse a moist, cakey almond filling in a golden crust.
By Maggie Ruggiero