Fry
Crispy Tilapia Fillets with Fennel-Mint Tzatziki
The product: Rich yogurt with great flavor.
The payoff: No need to drain regular yogurt.
The payoff: No need to drain regular yogurt.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Porcini Mushroom Latkes with Mushroom Salad and Chive "Cream"
By Selma Brown Morrow
Tender Zucchini Fritters with Green Goddess Dressing
By Ian Knauer
Zucchini Cakes with Smoked Trout
Grated zucchini gives these fritters a fresh flavor and a tender texture. Excellent served with Champagne.
By Tori Ritchie
Dessert Pancakes with Custard and Berries
These thin, anise-flavored pancakes are similar to French crepes.
By José Andrés
Orecchiette with Cauliflower, Anchovies, and Fried Croutons
The croutons found their way into this dish thanks to the frugality of Italian cooks. "Puglians don't throw anything out," says Donatella. "Any leftover bread is used in the pasta."
By Donatella Arpaia
Roasted Striped Bass with Fennel, Tomatoes, and Oil-Cured Olives
Some Italian cooks would never combine cheese and seafood, but feel free to grate a little Pecorino Romano over the striped bass before serving. "In Puglia, fish and cheese go together," says Donatella.
By Donatella Arpaia
Basic Yogurt Pancakes
This recipe is wonderful as is, or it can be used as a starting point for variations. Buttermilk is the traditional base for pancakes, but for me, this raised several dilemmas: One, even the largest supermarkets were often out of stock, and two, even when I did find it, it was never organic. I discovered that yogurt is an excellent base for pancake batter, producing tender, golden results. Once we went vegan, I found that soy yogurt works just as well.
By Nava Atlas
Potato Latkes
Potato latkes are really just potato kugel in pancake form.
By Sharon Lebewohl, Rena Bulkin, and Jack Lebewohl
Simple Fried Rice
The rice needs to stir-fry in a generous amount of oil. (It's fried rice, after all.) If you don't use enough oil, the dish starts to taste more like a rice casserole. Note that except for the 2 eggs, 1 onion, and 1 garlic clove, all the other ingredients begin with 4.
By Pam Anderson
Chicken and Celery Pot Stickers
Traditional pot stickers, complete with fresh dough and the requisite number of pleats, are best saved for a special occasion. This version, made with store–bought wonton wrappers, is easy enough for a weeknight meal. A flavorful filling of ground chicken and celery (left over from Sage Stuffing) is seasoned with sesame oil and soy sauce and enclosed within the simply folded wonton—no pleats involved. We do cook the pot stickers the conventional way, by first frying them and then steaming them until the water evaporates and the bottoms are crisp and golden. It is imperative to use dark chicken meat (from legs and thighs) because it doesn't dry out the way leaner white meat can.
By Andrea Albin
Frozen Peanut Butter Pie with Candied Bacon
Candied bacon might seem like the ultimate example of gilding the lily, but it adds a sweet, smoky edge to this already luscious pie. Elvis would be proud.
By Andrea Albin
Orange and Raisin Matzo Meal Pancakes
These light pancakes are a great brunch entrée.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Onion Oil
By Eileen Yin-Fei Lo
Pot Stickers
These small dumplings come with both a story and a significant history. According to legend, they were born in the imperial kitchen when a cook, making dumplings for the emperor, forgot a batch that was slowly cooking. They were singed brown, slightly burned. With no time to spare, and an impatient, hungry emperor waiting, the cook, a nimble and adaptive fellow, arranged the dumplings on a platter, burned sides up, and presented them to the emperor as a new dish that he called, quotie, which means "stuck bottom." The emperor was delighted. Legend or not, it is a fact that these browned half-moons filled with pork and vegetables were eventually sold daily by the thousands from small streetside stands to satisfy the morning habits of people in Beijing and Tianjin, who called them jiaozi, or "little dumplings." It is a tradition that exists to this day.
As popular foods do, these jiaozi migrated to Shanghai, where they became known by their imperial name of quotie, to describe their cooking process. The habit of morning pot stickers swept Shanghai, and to this day they are sold, as in Beijing, from small streetside stands. Over the years, they migrated south to Guangzhou and Hong Kong, carried by Shanghainese fleeing the Japanese invasion of their city, and sold first by refugees on the streets as a way of making a living.
They have become part of the accommodating dim sum repertoire, and are referred to in Cantonese as wor tip, or "pot stickers." Serve them with a ginger-vinegar sauce (see note).
By Eileen Yin-Fei Lo
Chicken Parmesan Burgers
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Sweet Potato Cakes with Mango-Pineapple Chutney
The mango-pineapple chutney is a delicious condiment for these exotic potato cakes, which would be great with poached eggs for brunch.
By Jill Dupleix
Falafel with Hummus
Falafel makes a great appetizer when paired with hummus for dipping. For a quick meal, serve atop a salad or inside pita bread with lettuce, tomatoes, and a drizzle of tahini.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Coconut Shrimp
Japanese breadcrumbs and shredded coconut give these shrimp a crispy, crunchy crust.
By Lora Zarubin
Red Bean and Sausage Cakes with Poached Eggs and Cilantro Salsa
Here's a new take on breakfast.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen