Dairy Free
Confit Turkey With Chiles and Garlic
With the texture of duck confit and extra-rich, deep flavor closer to pork carnitas than your average Thanksgiving bird, these turkey legs beg to fall apart with the push of a fork.
By Chris Morocco
Carrot, Onion, and Spinach Bhajias
These crispy fritters are made with grated carrots, onions, and ginger, plus garam masala and chile. The dipping sauce has a hefty pour of bourbon, which adds warming depth.
By Anjali Pathak
Shabzi Pakora
This vegetable fritter recipe calls for onions, cabbage, potato, and carrot, but you can use any combination of vegetables you have.
By Saira Hamilton
Crispy Salt and Pepper Potatoes
These potatoes are like little starch balloons that pop when you bite into them. Serve them as a side, or add an aioli or creamy dressing to make them a snacky starter.
By Dan Kluger
Newton's Law
Apple butter is a brilliant shortcut to a robustly flavored fall cocktail. Spiced with cinnamon and sometimes ginger, nutmeg, or clove, it brings in every essential autumn note in a teaspoon or two.
By Maggie Hoffman
Spiced Lentil and Caramelized Onion Baked Eggs
The secret to these stewy baked eggs is a can of lentil soup. Any basic variety of lentil soup will work—you'll dress it up with the earthy spices and caramelized onions.
By Kendra Vaculin
Spiral Ham in the Slow Cooker
The process for this spiral ham is all about imparting flavor. Once finished, the meat will be super-tender and you’ll have a great cooking liquid that can be sopped up with rice, tortillas, potatoes, bread…or egg noodles.
By Alex Guarnaschelli
Roasted Beets With Crispy Sunchokes and Pickled Orange-Ginger Purée
The combination of beets and ginger gives you a great spectrum of flavors, while crunchy toasted cashews and a mess of crispy sunchoke chips lend contrasting texture.
By Dan Kluger
Maple and Chile Roasted Squash With Quinoa Tabouli
Brush butternut squash with maple-chile oil before roasting, then top with a lemon-tahini dressing and herby quinoa.
By Donna Hay
Sloppy Joe Shirred Eggs With Spinach
This turkey-based Sloppy Joe-inspired sauce uses carrots and deeply caramelized onions to add a bit of sweetness. Adding eggs and garlicky spinach turns it into a meal.
By Vivian Howard
R-Rated Onions
It takes the better part of an hour to coax an onion's sugars from blonde to nutty brown. Make a big batch of caramelized onions once and save them to pull out when you want all that complex flavor without having spent all that time.
By Vivian Howard
Miso-Squash Ramen
In this ramen recipe, I use miso paste in two different ways, slathering it on the squash before it roasts and mixing it into the broth, where it amplifies both the sweet and savory character of the squash. The real game changer is blending some of the roasted squash into the broth, delivering velvety, rich body. You can use other types of squash or pumpkins for this dish, but because of its robust flesh, nutty flavor, and meaty mouthfeel, Japanese kabocha is my preferred choice; butternut squash is a worthy substitute.
By Hetty McKinnon
Baigan Chokha
When grilled (or broiled) whole, eggplants get silky and smoky inside and charred on the exterior—perfect for mashing and mixing with sautéed onion, garlic, and fresh tomato.
By Ramin Ganeshram
Dad's Curried Chicken
This Trinidadian version of curried chicken is an earthy, rich stew of whole chicken pieces in an aromatic, vibrant broth, spiked with hot chile and a traditional herb paste.
By Ramin Ganeshram
Trinidad Curry Powder
Hot pepper is notably absent from this mixture—unlike curry powder from Madras. Trinidadians like to add fresh hot pepper to dishes, according to taste.
By Ramin Ganeshram
Shrimp Creole
Quickly simmer shrimp in a stew of canned tomatoes, bell pepper, chicken broth, and cumin for an excellent and easy dinner.
Green Seasoning
Green seasoning is one of those herb mixtures that is unique to the Caribbean and differs slightly from island to island.
By Ramin Ganeshram
Remember the Alimony
This sherry-Cynar Negroni riff was created by bartender Dan Greenbaum at The Beagle in New York City.
By Adrienne Stillman
Mango Curry
This vibrantly colored mango curry is authentically Keralan, and one we’d typically pair with a fish curry and accompany with rice.
By Joe Thottungal