Cookbooks
Manchurian Green Beans With Tofu
The garlic, ginger, and chile sauce that flavors this dish is one of the popular sauces used in Indo-Chinese cuisine.
By Darshana Thacker
Costa Rican Breakfast Bowl
Leftover rice and canned beans makes this recipe quick and easy to throw together at the start of any day.
By Darshana Thacker
Leek-Top Baking-Sheet Hash
Roasted or sautéed dark green leek tops are just as good and way more beautiful than their more popular white onion siblings: tender, totally flavorful—they're the hero of this hash.
By Joel Gamoran
Make-Ahead Chicken Freezer Packets
Imagine this: a stack of packets in your freezer that you can take straight to the oven for a full dinner in 30 minutes.
By Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough
Spicy Gluten-Free Hush Puppies
Millet and glutinous rice flours form the base of these fried, chicken-studded appetizers.
By Amy Shirley
Chuck Eye with Carrot Top Salsa Verde
Grill tender, inexpensive chuck eye steaks and top with a salsa verde made with carrot tops instead of parsley—it's gorgeous on pretty much anything!
By Joel Gamoran
Steamed Clams with Almond and Parsley Butter and No Linguine
Sometimes, mid-cooking, I like to jettison my plan and make a new, better plan. The trick is knowing when it’s better. I’m not saying I randomly hobble myself, cruelty-cooking-show style, it’s just that it’s exciting to change it up sometimes. And it surprises the family. Historically, some of the best jettison dinners at my house have started out as regular old pasta night and ended up as gather-around-the-skillet-with-bowls-and-bread night. This was one of those.
By Cal Peternell
Cauliflower with Almond Aillade
Aillade's egglessness leaves it with a slightly weaker constitution than it's cousin aioli, so it can break more easily. Happily, it doesn’t matter if it breaks—carry on and it will all come together when it hits the hot cauliflower and a little water.
By Cal Peternell
Salsa Rustica with Egg and Pancetta
Spoon salsa rustica over grilled bread, grilled or roasted vegetables, roasted potatoes, sautéed greens, sliced tomatoes, boiled green beans, or cauliflower.
By Cal Peternell
Filipino Spiced Vinegar
You can store this all-purpose sweet-and-spicy vinegar in clean mason jars, but it is easier to keep it in repurposed glass bottles. Note that this recipe can be adjusted as you like—try using different chiles or other spices like bay leaf.
By Nicole Ponseca and Miguel Trinidad
Filipino Chicken Skewers
This dish—both a backyard staple and street food treat in the Philippines—is slightly sticky when cooked and develops a nice char while the dark thigh meat stays tender and juicy.
By Nicole Ponseca and Miguel Trinidad
Garlic Fried Rice
A ubiquitous staple on Filipino tables, this rice dish is heavily perfumed with garlic oil and tossed with crispy sautéed garlic chips.
By Nicole Ponseca and Miguel Trinidad
Filipino Eggplant Omelet
For this popular Filipino breakfast, the eggplants are heavily charred before being battered with egg and pan-fried, making them smoky, creamy, crispy, and totally satisfying.
By Nicole Ponseca and Miguel Trinidad
Ground Pork Menudo
Using ground pork instead of stew meat is a practical and easy way of making menudo on a weeknight.
By Liza Agbanlog
Chicken in Pineapple Sauce
Pineapple is the main ingredient in this saucy Filipino dish and makes the chicken sweet, tender and tasty.
By Liza Agbanlog
Meatballs and Noodle Soup
Almondigas is a hearty Filipino soup consisting of meatballs and thin, salted Chinese noodles made from wheat flour that cook quickly.
By Liza Agbanlog
Stir-Fried Rice Noodles with Shrimp and Adobo
Pansit has come to symbolize long life and health in Filipino culture, and is commonly served at birthdays, baptisms, and New Year’s celebrations.
By Monica Macansantos
Seafood Sinigang
Sinigang is adobo’s close contender for the title of National Dish of the Philippines. Like many Filipino dishes, this soup is bold in taste: sour, salty, slightly sweet, spicy, and umami.
By Jacqueline Chio-Lauri
Spaghetti Sauce Chicken Afritada
Afritada, a traditional chicken and vegetable stew, is a gateway dish to Filipino cuisine. Spaghetti sauce, instead of fresh tomatoes or tomato sauce, is used in this recipe for convenience and taste.
By Dalena Haskins Benavente
Spicy Sizzling Squid
If you travel to the Philippines, though, you’ll discover that you can “sisig” pretty much anything. There’s chicken sisig, tuna sisig, goat sisig, and even vegetarian sisig. This squid iteration incorporates salmon caviar and crushed prawn crackers.
By Marvin Gapultos