Orange
Radicchio, Red Cabbage and Tomatoes with Orange Vinaigrette
For a prettier salad, we used two varieties of radicchio — the common Verona, with red leaves and white ribs, and Treviso, which can range from pink to red and has narrower, pointed leaves.
Plum Sherbert with Orange Juice and Plum Wine
A pretty pink dessert that is refreshing and light. Plums with dark purple skin or flesh will give the sherbet beautiful color. Serve a pot of green tea alongside.
Lighter-Than-Air Chocolate Roll
Inspired by Dionne Lucas's recipe for roulade léontine, this easy flourless chocolate roll cake will delight your guests with its airy texture and intense chocolate flavor.
By Ruth Cousineau
Fruit Salad with Honey and Rum
Add a splash of Angostura bitters, a flavoring found in the supermarket's liquor section, for an intriguing spicy note.
By Bettina Ciacci
Citrus Marinated Shrimp Cocktail
"I'm originally from Ecuador, and I'll never forget the wonderful food there," Maria Budde of Orange, California. "I enjoy re-creating dishes from my home country, and this flavorful starter is typical of my native cuisine. It's simple to make and delicious."
By Maria Budde
Candied-Orange Wafers
(Teules de Taronja)
These crisp cookies are shaped like the terra-cotta roof tiles, teules (tejas in Castilian Spanish), that top village houses—old and new—throughout Spain. Almonds are a common ingredient in Catalan cookies, but we took another cue from the Moors and added candied orange.
Candied Orange Zest
You can sometimes find candied orange peel in stores, but it is typically thicker, chewier, and more moist than candied zest. It will also never have the intense citrusy flavor of candied zest you make yourself.
Candied Yams
This recipe was created for my ten-year-old friend and cooking student, Evan Chender, who used it for his Thanksgiving feast one year. Fresh ginger really spices up the sweet, meltingly tender yams.
By Peter Berley
Sauteed Red Snapper Fillets with Fennel and Orange
The fresh flavors of fennel and orange make this simple fish dish shine. You can serve it alone or with a helping of rice.
Ginger Cake with Crystallized Ginger Frosting
This turns a terrific gingerbread—created by Rick Rodgers, an accomplished baker and food writer—into a layer cake. Let the stout stand, opened, at room temperature overnight so that it’s flat when you add it to the batter.
By Bruce Aidells
Orange Walnut Cookies
You can use the more traditional orange flower water or rose water instead of the orange peel and juice concentrate to flavor these crispy cookies.
By Rachel Shakerchi
Pears Poached in Red Wine, Cardamom and Orange
A cardamom- and orange-scented syrup is spooned over warm pears and scoops of vanilla ice cream in this lovely dessert. Refrigerate leftover poaching syrup to serve over ice cream later in the week.
Apricot Honey Cake
"One thing I cannot get out of my head" said Ben Moskovitz, owner of Star Bakery in Oak Park, Michigan. "Was the food better growing up in Czechoslovakia or were the people hungrier there? My mother made a honey cake for the holiday, and it was so delicious. Honey was too expensive for us, so my mother burned the sugar to make it brown. Here I use pure honey, but I still think my mother's cake was better and I know I am wrong. The taste of hers is still in my mouth."
Mr. Moskovitz's European honey cake follows, with a few of my American additions. Other European Jewish bakers interviewed for this book also bake with white rye flour and cake flour when we would use all-purpose flour. I have included both choices.
By Joan Nathan
Pecan-Crusted Trout with Orange-Rosemary Butter Sauce
At the fish market, ask them to remove the head, tail and bones from the trout, then to cut each trout into two fillets, leaving the skin intact.
Pepper- and Coriander-Coated Salmon Fillets
A sprinkling of orange peel and parsley contrasts with the spicy crust on the salmon fillets. Serve with corn on the cob and a crisp, cold Chardonnay.