Gluten Free
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
Chicken Pelau
Pelau, rice cooked with meat and vegetables, really exemplifies Trinidadian cuisine because it is an admixture of various cooking styles.
By Ramin Ganeshram
Creole Cream Cheese
Creole cream cheese is Louisiana's answer to ricotta or burrata cheese. Traditionally, it’s eaten with cream, sugar, and fruit spooned over the top or used as a substitute for yogurt.
By Kelly Fields
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
Iced Café de Olla
I love the flavor of orange zest and spices in a café de olla, so I created a concentrated syrup that is ready on demand to flavor any cold brew. Coconuts are grown all along the Pacific coast of Mexico; use coconut milk to add richness and even more tropical flavor.
By Rick Martinez
Braised Chicken Legs With Grapes and Fennel
Sweet red or green grapes also have just the right amount of acidity. Sweet fennel and honey, Calabrian chile paste, and red wine vinegar make this a balanced meal.
By Christian Reynoso
Yogurt and Spice Roasted Salmon
Cube your salmon and roast it at high heat for a perfectly charred exterior and tender, flaky interior. The creamy marinade in this recipe brings flavor, while also keeping the salmon moist.
By Sabrina Ghayour
Veselka's Famous Borscht
In this recipe, beets are cooked in two separate batches: One batch is used to make “beet water,” a kind of rich beet stock, and the other batch is cooked and grated. This two-step process gives the borscht its distinct taste and depth of flavor.
By Tom Birchard and Natalie Danford
Papaya-and-Cubeb-Marinated Snapper With Baked Yam Chips
Fish and chips, when done well, is a cornerstone of British culinary success. It can be wrapped in old newspaper and eaten at the beach with a wooden fork with the same fervor and joy as a finely dined fish and chips served on white china with an expensive bottle of Chablis next to it. That comforting combination of carb and fish protein can be seen in many other cultures too. (Fish tacos, anyone?) So why wouldn’t Ghana have its own version?
By Zoe Adjonyoh
Drunk Apricot Shito (Ghanaian Hot Pepper Sauce)
Here is my super bougie restyling of an everyday Ghanaian hot chile condiment. My bet is that once you’ve made it, you’ll be shouting at your West African friends because no one told you about it before. Until now, you thought XO sauce solved everything. Until now, you thought sambal belacan was the only smoked fish dip the world needed. But now, you’ve realized: I Shito, therefore I am. This recipe is luxurious, it is decadent, it is rich and textured for lavish enjoyment. Right here is where hot pepper sauce dreams comes true.
By Zoe Adjonyoh
Summer Bean Soup With Tomato Brown Butter
This summer soup is deeply savory, with anchovies, bacon, and a brown butter–tomato sauce anchoring the whole thing.
By Cortney Burns
Tomato Brown Butter
Tomato brown butter is the deeply savory—and slightly sweet—result of swirling fresh, raw tomato purée into fragrant brown butter. Drizzle it over roasted vegetables, grilled fish, or grain bowls.
By Cortney Burns
Maple-Roasted Acorn Squash
When I was growing up, my mother served a lot of canned vegetables, but the one thing she always made from scratch was acorn squash, which she roasted with butter and maple syrup. When I revisited her old method, I found it was just as good as I remembered. The sweet squash filled with a big puddle of melted butter and sweet syrup is so irresistible!
By Ina Garten
Paneer With Burst Cherry Tomato Sauce
This dish of seared paneer channels flavors traditionally found in matar paneer—coriander, cumin, chile, and ginger—by incorporating them into a quick-cooking cherry tomato sauce.
By Sohla El-Waylly
Salt-and-Pepper Fish
This dish is inspired by a classic Cantonese preparation, which is traditionally battered and deep-fried. Here, the fish is pan-seared in hot oil, but still gets plenty of texture and flavor from ginger, caramelized scallions, and lots of freshly ground black pepper.
By Andy Baraghani
Fish Tacos al Pastor
Pork tacos al pastor may get the fame, but this fish al pastor deserves plenty of glory. A potent chile marinade adds lots of flavor before the fillets hit the grill, and a pineapple salsa is the perfect finishing touch.
By Rick Martinez
Zucchini-Lentil Fritters With Lemony Yogurt
These crispy zucchini fritters take inspiration from the Bengali onion snack piyaju. Soaked and blended red lentils make up the batter, which is spiked with turmeric and chile powder.
By Sohla El-Waylly
Sour Cream and Onion Potato Salad
Some would call showering potato salad with potato chips “gilding the lily.” We would call it “extremely sensible and incredibly tasty.”
By Molly Baz