Fall
Sugar Pumpkin, Feta, and Cilantro Quesadillas
A squeeze of lime unites all the flavors of these new-wave quesadillas.
By Ross Dobson
New York Strip and Fall Vegetable Roast with Mustard Cream Sauce
Root vegetables and mushrooms are enriched by the meat's pan juices.
By Molly Stevens
Glazed Root Vegetables
By Maria Helm Sinskey
Fuji Apple Spice Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting
Why Fujis? This not-too-sugary cake (inspired by carrot cake) is best when made with fairly sweet apples. Plus, it's important to choose an apple variety with a sturdy structure so that it won't break down during baking. Fuji apples fill the bill on both counts.
By Dorie Greenspan
Spiced Pumpkin Phyllo Pie
A flaky phyllo crust, layered with butter and a pumpkin pie–spice sugar forms the crust for this silky well-spiced pie.
By Ross Dobson
Linguine with Butternut Squash, Spinach, and Mussels
Linguine with mussels gets fit for fall with roasted butternut squash and wilted spinach. Briny and sweet mussels complement the richness of the squash.
By Molly Stevens
Maple-Brined Pork Roast with Apples, Onions, and Mustard Breadcrumbs
Apples turn sweet as they roast alongside pork loin flavored with herbs and maple syrup. Brine the roast one day ahead.
By Molly Stevens
Roast Chicken with Broccoli Rabe, Fingerling Potatoes, and Garlic-Parsley Jus
Roasting greens, such as broccoli rabe, turns them deliciously crispy and earthy. The broccoli rabe's inherent bitterness nicely offsets the sweetness of the roasted-garlic pan sauce. The chicken needs to be salted one day ahead.
By Molly Stevens
Old-Fashioned Mixed-Apple Pie
An assortment of apple varieties adds complexity to this nicely spiced apple pie. The Pink Lady apples are just slightly tart with hints of raspberry and kiwi. Pippins are firm with crisp and tart flavors. And Golden Delicious apples (a classic choice for pies) have a juicy texture and honeyed sweetness.
By Dorie Greenspan
Brisket Braised in Porter
The brisket tastes best if prepared ahead, so make it at least one day and up to two days before you plan to serve it. Chilling the brisket makes it easier to slice. Rewarm the meat in the sauce and serve with a full-flavored dark beer (see our suggestions below).
By Bruce Aidells
Glowing Jack-o'-Lantern Cookies
Simple butter cookies with a hint of lemon are colored orange and cut like jack-o'-lanterns. Use the tip of a knife to cut the shapes freehand and your jack-o'-lanterns will have lots of personality. They take on added luster—literally!—when you crush and melt hard candies in the spaces for the eyes, nose, and grinning mouth. The stained glass effect is beautiful and surprisingly effective given the simplicity of the process. Use lemon drops for a yellow gleam and to ramp up the flavor, or, if you prefer, try butterscotch candies for an orange glow. Let your kids work off some energy crushing the candies while you prepare the dough.
By Sharon Bowers
Funny Bones
More fun with pretzels and melted chocolate! Like the pretzel lollipop ghosts, these are a tasty mix of sweet and salty. With the white chocolate coating on them, they are uniformly charming. For the best effect, heap and jumble the little bones in a bowl rather than laying them on a plate. (Although I call for white chips, this is one place where lower grade white "coating" chocolate or bark is so easy to work with that it might be worth the trade-off in taste.)
By Sharon Bowers
Monster Eyeballs
Use miniature M&Ms (green are fun) to make the irises in these monster eyes and begin with very soft butter, or the ingredients will be difficult to blend. Mound the eyeballs into a bowl for serving, or lay them out on a tray in row after unblinking row.
By Sharon Bowers
Figgy Piggy Cornish Hens
Figs combine beautifully with all sorts of salty flavors—prosciutto, for instance, or Gorgonzola, or, of course, bacon. They also add succulent, sumptuous texture.
By Ian Knauer
Pear Butterscotch Pie
When thoughts turn to pie, why not pear? Bartletts, which are usually eaten out of hand, are also excellent baked. Brown sugar provides the butterscotch.
By Melissa Roberts
Quince Poached in Cardamom Syrup
In Greek mythology, the quince, with its intoxicating perfume, was the golden apple that Paris gave to Aphrodite, "the fairest of them all." Edward Lear's Owl and Pussy-Cat dined "on mince, and slices of quince, which they ate with a runcible spoon." Coming up with a recipe to match the stuff of legend is not the easiest thing in the world, but this ultra-simple creation is delicate and alluringly aromatic. Worthy, in fact, of the goddess of beauty and, served as a compote with a little whipped cream or Greek-style yogurt, suitable for eating with a spoon, runcible or otherwise.
By Andrea Albin
Fresh Corn Pancakes
Ready your griddle. These pancakes capture the golden sweetness of corn cut from the cob. Drizzle warm maple syrup on them for breakfast or serve them as a side dish with salsa and sour cream.
By Ian Knauer
Walnut Cake with Sautéed Pears, Pecorino, and Black Pepper Ice Cream
An amazing mix of textures and flavors—nutty, sweet, salty, plus a touch of heat from the peppercorns.
Caramel-Apple Tartlets with Cinnamon-Rum Ice Cream
This tartlet is complex, but well worth the effort. It sprang from the mind of our bakery's apple-obsessed chef, Eric Wolitzky (he is from the apple heartland of upstate New York), who was attempting to wring more flavor from the traditional apple pie. Were still huge fans of the classic, but this version—with its perfect ratio of caramel to apple to buttery crust and crunchy topping—is now our must have apple dessert. At the bakery, we put the tartlets out at noon, and they are gone by 12:30 p.m., so we feel fairly confident that people share our new obsession.
By Matt Lewis and Renato Poliafito