Thanksgiving
Smoky Turkey Corn Chowder With Bacon
This warming chowder is a fantastic way to use leftover turkey (and works great with rotisserie chicken, too.) Smoky bacon, earthy cumin, and mild green chiles add tons of flavor to this hearty soup.
By Rhoda Boone
Spiced Cranberry-Pear Sundaes
This autumnal dessert is prepped in advance and then completed at the tablea delicious time saver!
By Leah Koenig
Quick-Roasted Turkey with Parsley-Caper Sauce
Spatchcocking your turkey significantly cuts the roasting time, and it's easy to dojust take out the backbone and flatten the bird. If you're nervous about doing it yourself, just ask a butcher at the meat counter to handle it for you.
By Leah Koenig
Skillet Stuffing With Apples, Shallots, and Cranberries
Cooking your stuffing in an ovenproof skillet means it can go from stove to oven without missing a beat. Prepping your aromatic vegetables in the food processor cuts down on chopping time, too.
By Leah Koenig
Green Beans With Za'atar and Lemon
Prep your green beans quickly; stack a handful of them together on a cutting board and trim the stem ends off the whole stack at once.
By Leah Koenig
Butterflied Turkey a la Parrilla with Chanterelles and Grilled Chicory
A grilled split turkey, golden brown as it comes from the parrilla, is one of my favorite dishes. Salt and pepper are all it needs. Such a simple preparation wants an equally uncomplicated but flavorful side dish. Chicory, which I learned to love when I worked in Italy as a young man, does the trick for me every time. Brushed with olive oil, seasoned with salt and pepper, and grilled to crispness, it is as good as the turkey that it graces. If you are lucky enough to have acquired some chanterelles or other wild mushrooms to sauté, they make the crowning touch. Their color is like the caramelized crust of the chicken.
I butterfly my turkeys differently than most butchers: I split them through the breastbone instead of the back, leaving the backbone in instead of discarding it. I think you get a juicier turkey this way, and an extra fun bone to pick.
By Francis Mallmann
Smoked Turkey with Hot Pepper Jelly Glaze
Smoking a whole turkey is little more work than roasting a bird, but it infuses the meat with a rich, woodsy flavor. All it requires is setting up a grill. Once that's done, the turkey's good to go—all it needs is a simple glaze made from hot-pepper jelly. The final glaze caramelizes on the skin and adds a sweet and sour heat to the smoky turkey.
By Elizabeth Karmel
Thomas Keller’s Favorite Roast Turkey
Beloved for a reason, this bird is brined and then air-dried in the refrigerator for the crispiest, most flavorsome turkey skin ever.
By Thomas Keller
Apple, Pear, and Cranberry Coffee Cake
We like to bake with a combination of apples: some sweet and some tart, some that keep their shape and others that will break down and get saucy. Adding the pear lends a perfumey quality to the cake.
By Jeff Hertzberg, M.D. and Zoë François
Spiced Kabocha Squash Pie
This aromatic alternative to pumpkin pie calls for fresh (not canned!) squash and a new twist on the classic crumble topping. If you'd like some sparkle on the edge of your crust, brush it with a beaten egg and sprinkle with coarse sugar before baking.
By Rhoda Boone
Brown-Butter Pecan Pie With Rum and Espresso
Brown butter brings out nuttiness of the pecans, while the bite of rum and the slight bitterness of espresso balance out the sweetness of this pie.
By Rhoda Boone
Brussels Sprouts Salad with Szechuan Peppercorn and Celery
Szechuan peppercorn's unique flavor is tingly and refreshing rather than chile-hot. You can find them in gourmet shops or online. You can also substitute a pinch of red-pepper flakes if you'd prefer a bit of heat instead.
By Sue Li
Pan-Roasted Carrots with Miso-Butter
By Sue Li
Peking-Style Roast Turkey with Molasses-Soy Glaze and Orange-Ginger Gravy
Steaming might seem a surprising way to start cooking a turkey, but the payoff is real: The extra step makes the bird extra-juicy, and cuts down on the overall cooking time.
By Sue Li
Gravy
By Sean Brock
Roasted Acorn and Delicata Squash Salad
If using large mustard greens, remove the tough stems and tear leaves into bite-size pieces. Smaller leaves can be left whole.
By Amy Chaplin
Spiced Sweet Potato Bundt Cake
Everyone loves a Bundt, and a sweet-potato version drizzled with coffee-chocolate sauce is hard to beat.
By Tanya Holland and Jan Newberry