Peanut
Peanutty Energy Bars
This recipe was a winner in the 2001 Plains Peanut Festival Recipe Contest in Plains, Georgia and appears here courtesy of the The Peanut Institute. It was also reprinted in Nancy Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook. Clark writes: This prizewinning recipe offers a yummy alternative to commercial energy bars. These homemade bars are perfect for when you are hiking or biking, as well as for a satisfying afternoon snack. They are relatively high in fat, but it's healthful fat from peanuts and sunflower seeds. For variety, make this recipe with cashews and cashew butter and add a variety of dried fruits (cranberries, cherries, and dates).
By Amy Harrison
Crunchy Asian Chicken Salad
Kids and adults alike will enjoy this lunch. Store this tasty salad in a wide-mouthed thermal container, use several Bibb or Boston lettuce leaves to wrap around the salad instead of bread, and pack the nuts separately in a little plastic bag for sprinkling. For those who can take the heat, add a splash of Chinese hot oil or hot sesame oil to the salad.
By Tracey Seaman and Tanya Wenman Steel
Black-Eyed Pea Fritters with Hot Pepper Sauce
While bean fritters are thought to have their origin in Nigeria, one can find them throughout West Africa. Inspired by the Black-Eyed Pea Fritters served at the Gambian-Cameroonian restaurant Bennachin in New Orleans, I whipped up this dish.
By Bryant Terry
Saté Chicken Salad
For a bold no-cook dinner, pick up a rotisserie chicken, chop some vegetables, and toss everything with a pantry-friendly dressing that evokes the spicy peanut dipping sauce served with the Southeast Asian meat skewers called saté.
By Melissa Roberts
Chili-Lime Peanuts
By Elizabeth Falkner
Peanut Butter-Honey Tart with Ganache Glaze
A decadent candylike dessert that tastes like a Snickers bar, all grown up.
By Dédé Wilson
Chocolate Cake with Milk Chocolate-Peanut Butter Frosting and Peanut Butter Brittle
No, it's not a mistake. This cake really doesn't contain any eggs. The oil in the batter makes the cake moist; the rest of the ingredients provide enough structure to give the cake a great crumb.
By Dédé Wilson
Peanut and Caramel Ice Cream Pie
Layer store-bought vanilla ice cream with peanut butter, caramel sauce, and a peanut–graham cracker crust for the ultimate summer dessert indulgence.
By Sarah Tenaglia
Vietnamese Chicken Salad
Since emigrating from Vietnam in the 1970s, Kia Dickinson has been generously sharing her incredible recipes with everyone she meets, including food editor Ian Knauer. This colorful mix of moist poached chicken, cabbage, carrots, and fresh herbs tossed with a wild, tongue-searing dressing is the quintessential summer salad—cool, colorful, and very fresh. When preparing this recipe, Dickinson uses the leftover poaching liquid to make rice.
By Kia Dickinson
Squid and Pork Noodle Salad
The squid in this entrée is tender and picks up the flavors it's cooked with.
By Anita Lo
Grilled Pork Chops with Saté Sauce
Nutty and faintly sweet, our fast peanut sauce tops pork chops for an American take on the Southeast Asian specialty.
By Lillian Chou
Spicy Thai Tofu with Red Bell Peppers and Peanuts
By Rozanne Gold
Sweet, Tart, and Spicy Shrimp and Cucumber Salad
A satisfying first-course salad with beautifully balanced Asian flavors.
By Amelia Saltsman
Chile Peanuts
By Roberto Santibañez
Chinese Broccoli
By Victoria Granof
Spicy Stir Fried Chicken and Greens with Peanuts
By Molly Stevens
Spicy Beef Curry
The curries that are sold in the markets of southern Thailand inspired this heavily spiced dish. Chef Boetz says this delicious main course is a hybrid of an Indian and a Thai curry. The use of dried spices (coriander, cardamom, cumin) is common in Indian curries; coconut milk and fresh, aromatic ingredients (cilantro, lemongrass, galangal) are often used in Thai curries.
By Martin Boetz
Chocolate Peanut Toffee
The transformation of butter, sugar, and salt into toffee is culinary alchemy at its best. This version is studded with cocktail peanuts and a decadent layer of bittersweet chocolate.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez and Lillian Chou
Apple and Smoked-Bacon Salad with Lychees and Chili Nuts
Chang's two restaurants cater decidedly to the pork lover, and this salad is no exception. Among the sweet, smoky, and tart notes tossed together, you'll get an occasional zing of heat from the chili nuts (which, served on their own, may very well become your new favorite bar snack).
By David Chang
Thai Chicken Salad with Rice Noodles
To give this salad more crunch, add blanched soybeans (edamame) or fried wonton strips.
By Anthony Marini