Hazelnut
Apricot Linzertorte with Quark Whipped Cream
For more on assembling the torte, see "Prep School."
By Andrew Chase and Erwin Schrottner
Chocolate-Nut Tart with Dried Fruit
Chop your favorite nuts and dried fruit to fill this tart. If desired, use toasted coconut or chopped crystallized ginger instead of toffee bits for the garnish.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Hazelnut Cinnamon Crescents
The buttery, nutty cookies are dusted with powdered sugar while they're still warm from the oven.
By Dédé Wilson
Escarole and Butter Lettuce Salad with Pomegranate Seeds and Hazelnuts
By Cristina Ceccatelli Cook
Spinach Salad with Bosc Pears, Cranberries, Red Onion, and Toasted Hazelnuts
This spinach salad speaks to all the wonderful autumnal flavors of the Pacific Northwest. The new crop of bronzed Bosc pears is piled high at the farmers' market; the hazelnuts have been harvested, shelled, and bagged for sale; and the cranberries arrive from the Long Beach, Washington, coastal bogs. I buy sweetened dried cranberries from a local producer, but they are readily available at the grocery store (Ocean Spray is a good-quality packager), found alongside raisins and other dried fruits. This salad is a snap to assemble if you buy the packaged prewashed and trimmed baby spinach.
By Diane Morgan
Multi-Grain Penne with Hazelnut Pesto, Green Beans, and Parmesan
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Pumpkin Hazelnut Compote
Especially in northern Turkey where the climate approximates northern coastal United States, pumpkins and pumpkin-like sweet winter squash are grown. Hazelnuts are also grown there, along the Black Sea. They combine well in this dessert.
By Carol Robertson
Gianduia Gelato
The satiny hazelnut-flavored chocolate called gianduia—named for the masked character Gianduia of the centuries-old Italian commedia dell'arte—makes for a gelato that is suave and intense.
By Andrea Albin
Baked Tomatoes with Hazelnut Bread Crumbs
A topping of buttery whole-wheat bread crumbs and hazelnuts creates a toasty counterpoint to baked thick-sliced tomatoes. What prevents it from being too rich, though, is the accent of thyme—lemon thyme in particular. With its small green leaves edged in yellow, the herb is easy to spot at the farmers market. Still not sure? Take a sniff. Lemon thyme's brisk, citrusy scent is a real eye-opener.
By Ruth Cousineau
Coconut-Lime Bars with Hazelnut Shortbread Crust
A sprinkling of sweetened coconut tempers the tangy lime filling.
By Lisa Zwirn
Penne with Hazelnut Gremolata and Roasted Broccolini
The slight bitterness of the roasted broccolini balances the richness of the duck breast.
By Diane Rossen Worthington
Linzer "Hollywood Stars"
Editor's note: This recipe is from chef Wolfgang Puck.
My mother would always begin baking in early December and keep it up right through the holidays. But she wasn't working frantically the whole time. She just knew that the earlier you start your holiday baking, the more you'll be free to enjoy the big celebrations. The ingredients in her cookies promote tenderness and retain moisture so that they stand up well to storage for several weeks when properly packed. My mother's Linzer cookies not only stay moist thanks to their ground hazelnuts and raspberry jam, but they actually improve in flavor as their subtle blend of spices matures. They remain one of my favorites.
By Wolfgang Puck
Hake with Hazelnuts and Capers
Hake, like cod, is mild in flavor yet meaty in texture. Here, it embraces the crunch of sautéed hazelnuts, whose richness is offset by fresh parsley and briny capers.
By Ian Knauer
Chocolate Hazelnut Cookies
Let's just say that finding yourself alone in a room with a plate of these cookies and a tall glass of milk would be very, very dangerous. The trifecta of chocolate, hazelnuts, and rum is irresistible. Decorating the cutouts with royal icing adds a festive touch.
By Shelley Wiseman
Twelve-Layer Mocha Cake
What better way to celebrate the holidays than with something fabulous? In this elegant European-style cake, thin layers of different flavors come together in each bite. Fine-textured spongecake, soaked in espresso syrup, plays off of crisp hazelnut meringue, while the coffee and mocha buttercreams intensify the richness of a collapsed chocolate soufflé. The faint, bitter edge of dark coffee essentially saves this dessert from itself.
By Ruth Cousineau
Chocolate Hazelnut Fritters
If you don't want to go to the trouble of roasting and peeling hazelnuts, you can substitute chopped walnuts here. Simply toast them briefly in a dry pan (and let them cool) to unlock their full flavor.
This recipe offers a choice of finishing touches; if you serve the fritters in hot batches straight from the fryer, you can invite guests to dust their own with their choice of topping.
By Andrew Friedman
Chocolate Panforte Candies
A great homemade gift. Panforte (an Italian fruit-and-nut confection) is the topping for these bittersweet chocolates.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Bittersweet Chocolate and Hazelnut Tartlets with Jack Daniel's Ice Cream
With just a hint of whiskey in the ice cream and a strong coffee presence in the caramel sauce, this is a grown-up take on a classic chocolate dessert.
Mushroom Soup with Hazelnut Gremolata
Gremolata is traditionally made with chopped garlic, parsley, and lemon peel; this one incorporates chopped hazelnuts and uses orange peel instead of lemon.
By Tori Ritchie
Maple Hazelnut Pie
Not as rich as pecans, hazelnuts make for a delicious new spin on a southern classic. Use Grade B maple syrup for intense maple flavor.
By Tori Ritchie