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Fourth of July

Garlic and Herb Spatchcock Grilled Chicken

Spatchcocking (or splitting and flattening) this Italian-flavored chicken before grilling helps it cook more quickly and evenly.

Pimiento BLTs

Use a very sharp cheddar to make this—it's the difference between pimiento cheese and cheesy mayonnaise.

A Summer's Night Shrimp Cocktail

Telmo grew up in a Mexican neighborhood in San Jose, California. On warm evenings, he could be found at a busy roadside seafood joint called La Costa spooning up refreshing bites of coctel de camarón, or "shrimp cocktail." Served in a tall Styrofoam cup, the La Costa cocktail combines a sweet (but not cloying), tangy, and spicy tomato-based sauce, briny poached shrimp, avocado, cucumber, and pico de gallo, all topped with some shakes of a salsa picante and served with tostadas or saltine crackers. Our version is made with roasted fresh tomatoes instead of the traditional ketchup to brighten it up. The resulting sauce is more like a gazpacho than the typical country club-style cocktail sauce. The cocktail can be assembled a couple of hours ahead of time, but not too far in advance, as the shrimp becomes rubbery if left in the lime juice for too long. To make this shrimp cocktail into easy party fare, spoon it onto small store-bought tostadas, garnish with a little cilantro, and serve.

Pickled Watermelon Rind

Peach-Tarragon Shortcake

How is this shortcake different from all others? Cake flour makes it extra-tender, for starters, then it's baked in one big circle and bathed in tarragon-infused butter. You might never go back.

Red, White, and Blueberry Pie

A pile of red and blue berries tops off a cloud of white whipped cream in this blueberry-filled bit of glory

Grilled Pop-Up Oysters

When you don't feel like struggling to shuck oysters, just throw them on the grill.

Grilled Vegetables

Any combination of flame-kissed veggies brushed and tossed with this easy vinaigrette makes a deliciously smoky side.

Frozen Berry Slush

Bring your favorite yogurt to a new level of taste with this delicious Frozen Berry Slush recipe from CARNATION BREAKFAST ESSENTIALS. Try it today!

S'more Bites

Taste absolutely sinful…but they're not. You can make them up to two days ahead and store in an airtight container.

Peach-Berry Sangria

On a really hot day, freeze fruit for an hour or two prior to serving—it acts like sweet ice cubes.

Grilled Street Corn Salad with Cilantro Butter Shrimp, Pico de Gallo and Avocado Purée

This is a winning-contestant recipe from Season Four of FOX's MasterChef.

Minestrone Salad

This pasta salad is a clever take on a well-loved soup. Because it's served at room temperature, it makes a great side dish at a picnic or barbecue. It's colorful and extremely flavorful, with pesto, beans, and vegetables.

Burger Deluxe

Baby Potato Salad

Use a metal cake tester or thin paring knife to check the potatoes; they should still hold their shape but offer no resistance when pierced.

American Flag Cake

No Fourth of July celebration is complete without a traditional flag cake studded with sweet summer berries. But slice into our Stars and Stripes creation and you'll quickly discover this isn't your everyday vanilla sheet cake with buttercream frosting. For a fresh new take on everyone's favorite red, white, and blue finale, we paired moist chocolate cake with tangy cream cheese frosting, and finished with juicy raspberries and blueberries. Have no fear if cake decorating isn't your strong suit. You'll be able to master this patriotic design using our step-by-step photos and tips for frosting and adorning the ultimate Independence Day dessert.

Salt-Grilled Shrimp

Cooking on a bed of salt helps evenly conduct the high heat and infuse the shrimp with seasoning.

Pork Steak

When Snow's BBQ in Lexington was named best barbecue in Texas by Texas Monthly magazine in June 2008, Tootsie Tomanetz became an instant star in the barbecue world. It's odd that her significant skill as a pitmaster was "discovered" only after more than thirty years of tending pits. As one of thee rare female pitmasters in Texas, she says some folks insist on calling her a chef because they don't feel comfortable applying the pitmaster moniker to a woman, but Tootsie is no doubt a master of the many pit types out behind Snow's. Even several years removed from the initial stardom, she still gets asked every Saturday morning to pose for photos. Always humble, this reluctant star says she is just a "plain old country girl" who has lived her entire life in either Lexington or Giddings, just seventeen miles away, and would just as soon keep a low profile. That's going to be tough if she keeps showing up at 2 a.m. every Saturday to cook some of Texas' best pork, and she has no plans to stop, even at age seventy-seven.