Swiss Chard
Gratin of Endive and Ham
Gratins feature a crust of melted cheese and sometimes breadcrumbs. Serve with good bread and a salad for lunch or a light dinner.
Swiss Chard with Roasted Pepper
This recipe is used to prepare Cod Cannelloni with Swiss Chard and Roasted Peppers .
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Chard, Tomato and Cheese Casserole
The pile of raw fresh chard may look daunting, but don't worry: It cooks down to about two cups. As a meatless main course, the casserole will serve six.
By Bev Michaels
Sweet-and-Sour Swiss Chard with Dried Currants
This quick-to-make Sicilian side dish can accompany chicken, fish or meats.
Sauteed Celery Root with Swiss Chard
"Because I love to cook, I'll use any excuse to make dinner for my family or friends. Most of the recipes I concoct are partly based on how the ingredients look—presentation is very important to me," Dave Purdy of Hopewell, New Jersey. "Here, I combined celery root with Swiss chard because the colors and textures contrast so nicely."
This tangy side dish would be good with roasted poultry or meat.
By Dave Purdy
Swiss Chard Gnocchi
Gnocchi aux Blettes
According to some sources, gnocchi are a Niçois invention, and the use of Swiss chard in the dough is a traditional addition. In fact, Swiss chard is ubiquitous in Provençal cooking. This recipe is from L'Escalinada, where the gnocchi are served with a fresh tomato-herb sauce. Make your own sauce, or look for a good-quality one at the market.
Leg of Lamb Stuffed with Wild Mushrooms and Greens
For ease of preparation, ask for the full round, not the short cut or partial leg, and have the butcher butterfly it for you.
Garlic Toasts with Swiss Chard, Raisins, and Pine Nuts
Although this mix of greens with pine nuts and raisins is typically a vegetable course, here it is placed on toasted bread rounds to serve as a tapa. If you prefer it as a side dish, chop the chard very coarsely.
Pan-Roasted Pork Chops with Cranberries and Red Swiss Chard
Active time: 40 min Start to finish: 50 min
Tuscan Vegetable Soup (acquacotta)
By Faith Heller Willinger
Nudies
Nudies? In Florentine dialect they’re called gnudi, nudies, poking fun at a dish from the Casentino, a neighboring area that makes their greens and ricotta gnocchi with the same filling Florentines use for ravioli. Nudies because they’re not wearing pasta. Pronounced YNOO-dees. Spinach is used in Florence but wild greens are common in the mountainous Casentino. And ravioli are stuffed with wild greens in many regional recipes. Use wild greens if you can get them, otherwise use chard or spinach, whichever is fresh and tender. Traditionalists may want to search for sheep’s milk ricotta, which yields richer results, but everyone else can get by with whole cow’s milk ricotta. Drain watery ricotta in a metal sieve for 30 minutes if necessary. Cooks in search of a labor-intensive experience can form nudies by hand, one at a time, or use the 2-spoon French quenelle method. I prefer to pipe the mixture from a plastic bag onto a floured countertop, sprinkle the blobs with flour, and lightly roll to form walnut-sized, roughly shaped balls. Serve the nudies with melted butter or tomato or meat sauce, sprinkled with Parmigiano, and baked in the oven to melt the cheese.
By Faith Willinger