Dinner
Turmeric Salmon With Coconut Crisp
Coconut crisp, laced with chile and garlic, brings texture and heat to this easy salmon dish. Make a double or triple batch of the garnish and use it as a topping for savory oatmeal, hearty soups, or roasted winter vegetables.
By Andy Baraghani
Roasted Oysters With Warm Butter Mignonette
Quickly roasting oysters in a hot oven pops the shells apart so they can be opened the rest of the way by hand, no shucking skills required.
By Anna Stockwell
Steaming for Dark Days
When you've got Roasted Vegetable Fatigue, steaming your whole dinner in one pot is the remedy.
By Anna Stockwell
Steamed Winter Veggie Bowls
Everything in this dinner (including the eggs!) cooks together in one steamer insert.
By Anna Stockwell
Chicken Peppersoup
Nigerian peppersoup should be fiery hot with rich flavor—while the traditional spices can be hard to find in the U.S., this recipe approximates the taste with a few more readily available substitutes.
By Jessica B. Harris
Shaved Mushroom, Celery, and Sesame Salad
In this salad, the color palette—pale whites and browns—may leave something to be desired, but the gorgeous medley of textures and very complementary flavors makes up for it. This is an attractive one to serve for a dinner party.
By Lukas Volger
Tartiflette
This may sound like some ancient Alpine classic, but it's rather more modern than you'd expect.
By Tom Parker Bowles
Broiled Goat Cheese Toasts With Marinated Greens
This simple appetizer is a hit every time due in large part to the vast appeal of warm cheesy things.
By Lukas Volger
Silken Tofu With Soy-Sauced Tomatoes
This is a quick summer dish that capitalizes on juicy tomatoes and requires the stove to be turned on for just a few minutes.
By Lukas Volger
Nigerian Skewers
Seasoned with a spice mix of ground peanuts, cayenne, and ginger, these skewers are most often served with shaved onions and sliced tomato, here a tomato-cream dipping sauce quells the fiery heat.
By Kwame Onwuachi
Egusi Stew
Egusi seeds—the large seeds of an African melon—are toasted and ground to thicken this popular Nirgerian stew.
By Kwame Onwuachi
Sichuan Boiled Fish
This recipe moves fast—stay on top of it by prepping and lining up your ingredients before you start cooking.
By Lisa Cheng Smith
Chinese Broccoli With Soy Paste
The flavor of the soy paste really shines here, so use the best-quality one you can find. We like Yu Ding Xing’s glutinous rice soy paste.
By Lisa Cheng Smith
Soy-Braised Chicken Wings
Dark soy sauce along with regular soy sauce is what gives these wings their rich color. We like to use all flats—arguably the best part of the wing!—but a mix with drumettes or whole wings works too.
By Lisa Cheng Smith
Scallion-Oil Noodles
It’s astonishing how much scallion flavor these noodles take on from the infused scallion oil. Still, we encourage you to take it one step further with a garnish of crunchy fried scallion slices.
By Lisa Cheng Smith
Crispy Taiwanese Pork Cutlets
Flattening pork chops with the dull edge of a cleaver or heavy knife gives the surface an almost fluffy texture and helps the potato starch coating adhere.
By Lisa Cheng Smith
Lamb and Green Squash Dumplings
This dumpling combines lamb with delicate green summer squash, which brings a surprising freshness to the filling.
By Helen You
Boiled or Panfried Dumpling Dough
Use this easy dumpling dough with any filling you like, or add some puréed vegetables to the dough for colored dumpling skins.
By Helen You
Pork Wontons With Sesame Sauce
Whipping an egg into the filling of these simple, folded dumplings makes them fluffy and moist—and a double hit of soy amps up the umami.
By Lisa Cheng Smith