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Mint

Smoked Chicken and Sugar Snap Pea Salad with Mint

This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Lamb Chops with Yogurt-Mint Sauce

These lamb chops—an easier version of recipes you may have made before—go nicely with sugar snap peas with ginger and garlic and couscous with apricots .

All-Star Herb Salad

Rather than making herbs part of a green salad, why not make these fresh, flavorful greens the salad. The idea comes from Paris chef Alain Passard, who years ago served me an all-tarragon salad at his Left Bank restaurant, Arpège. When tarragon is fresh in the market or your garden overflows with this extraordinarily powerful herb, why not serve it with honor as a salad on its own? Years later Passard expanded what I call "the tarragon tangle" to a full-scale mixed herb salad—just a few well-dressed bites on a small salad plate—as an accompaniment. The idea really is to mix and match judiciously. Just don't use so many herbs that they lose their personality. Good combinations include parsley, mint, and tarragon. Or consider an all-mint salad to accompany grilled lamb, an all-tarragon salad to accompany grilled chicken, a sage-heavy salad to accompany roast pork. Other herbs that can be added to the following salad mix include a very judicious addition of hyssop, sage, chervil, and marjoram. Just be sure to include leaves only—no cheating—leaving all stems behind!

Soy-Ginger Beef and Noodle Salad with Peanut Dressing

Freezing the steak for about 30 minutes makes it much easier to slice; using a grill pan is the simplest way to cook the slices.

Leeks Vinaigrette with Red Bell Pepper and Mint

A colorful and unusual first course.

Fettuccine with Cherry Tomatoes, Goat Cheese, and Herbs

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Bibb, Watercress, and Mint Salad

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.

Lemon Soup with Garbanzo Beans

This light soup makes a lovely first course.

Chinese Turkey in Jade

Here we've adapted the classic Chinese dish "squab in jade," in which the meat is minced, stir-fried, and served in "cups" of lettuce.

Larb Chicken Salad

Fragrant lemongrass, chilies and a sweet and tangy sauce flavor this classic Thai appetizer.

Central Asian Rice and Bean Stew

The word mash means mung bean in Farsi and Farsi-related languages like Azeri and Tajik, as well as in Turkic languages such as Uzbek and Uighur. The word kichiri is like the Hindi word kitchri, a name for rice dishes made by cooking rice together with other ingredients. (The British took the idea and the name and turned it into "kedgeree.") We like this satisfying meal-in-one stew we learned in Tajikistan. Potatoes, carrots, and tomatoes give variety of taste and texture to the main event, a spiced combination of mung beans (yellow dal) and long-grain rice. Mashkichiri is quick and easy to prepare once the mung beans have soaked, and all too easy to eat in large quantities when accompanied by plenty of yogurt. Serve it as a simple meal in one, or serve with kebabs and a side dish of something crunchy, like sliced cucumbers or radishes, or Persian pickled radish. The winter version of this dish would have no tomatoes, and would use more carrots and onions instead. Winters in Central Asia are harsh, and there are few fresh vegetables to be had. Root vegetables, which can be stored and used when other vegetables are available, aren't an important part of the winter diet.

Pineapple and Mint Chutney

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less but requires additional unattended time.

Smoked Turkey Spring Rolls

All the good taste of deep-fried egg rolls without all the fat.
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