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Nut

Carrot-Walnut Loaf Cake

If you only have an 8 1/2x4 1/2" pan, there's no need to go out and get a new one. Simply hold back about 1 3/4 cups batter for later—it makes a mean waffle!

Sprouted Wild Rice with Pistachios and Spring Vegetables

Sprouting wild rice is a simple and delicious way to enjoy this amazing food completely raw. The process of sprouting wild rice is called "blooming" because the seeds actually unfold, very much like little petals, revealing the pale, tender insides. It's a really fun thing to watch, however slowly, and it's groovy to eat something you've seen transform over a few days. This salad combines fresh springtime tastes and textures, all sauced up with a delicious dressing featuring bright lemon and spicy mustard. The herbs add the final layer of flavor, making this a salad that truly tastes alive! Because the rice is sprouted, it is very sweet, requiring salt in the salad—make sure to season it well to suit your own taste.

Gluten-Free Orange Almond Coconut Muffins

A combination of brown rice flour, almond flour, and arrowroot replaces wheat flour in these delicious gluten-free muffins. The flavors of orange, coconut, and almond blend nicely here, with maple syrup adding a subtle back note of sweetness. Serve these for breakfast, brunch, or an afternoon snack.

Sautéed Greens with Toasted Walnuts

Toasted walnuts add a rich nuttiness to earthy greens. If you are following our $68 Dinner Story, use the reserved beet and Swiss chard greens and remaining chard stems from the Roasted Beet Salad with Flash-Pickled Radishes and Chard .

The Finishing Touch That Upgrades Bread, Fish, Vegetables, and Everything Else

The Middle Eastern nut and seed blend dukkah is easy to fall in love with—because there's almost nothing you can't sprinkle it on.

Seared Kale Salad with Brown Butter-Toasted Pine Nuts and Smoked Bacon

This salad is the answer to people who think they don't like leafy greens. Good kale has a deep, almost meaty flavor. Searing it and mixing it with brown-butter-drenched pine nuts, sweet raisins, and salty Parmesan cheese is a no-fail treatment. Most other hearty greens like beet greens, dandelion greens, or radish tops would also be good in this dish.

Coffee Coffee Coffee Cake

This decadent cake is infused with rich coffee flavor in three forms: brewed coffee, espresso powder, and coffee liqueur.

Zuni Roast Chicken with Bread Salad

The Zuni roast chicken depends on three things, beginning with the small size of the bird. Don't substitute a jumbo roaster—it will be too lean and won't tolerate high heat, which is the second requirement of the method. Small chickens, 2-3/4 to 3-1/2 pounds, flourish at high heat, roasting quickly and evenly, and, with lots of skin per ounce of meat, they are virtually designed to stay succulent. Your store may not promote this size for roasting, but let them know you'd like it. I used to ask for a whole fryer, but since many people don't want to cut up their own chickens for frying (or anything else), those smaller birds rarely make it to the display case intact; most are sacrificed to the "parts" market. But it is no secret that a whole fryer makes a great roaster—it's the size of bird favored for popular spit-roasted chickens to-go. It ought to return to retail cases. The third requirement is salting the bird at least 24 hours in advance. This improves flavor, keeps it moist, and makes it tender. We don't bother trussing the chicken—I want as much skin as possible to blister and color. And we don't rub the chicken with extra fat, trusting its own skin to provide enough. But if the chicken is about method, the bread salad is more about recipe. Sort of a scrappy extramural stuffing, it is a warm mix of crispy, tender, and chewy chunks of bread, a little slivered garlic and scallion, a scatter of currants and pine nuts, and a handful of greens, all moistened with vinaigrette and chicken drippings.

Granola

On those mornings when you don't want to do anything but get up, pour coffee, and sit with your face in the sun, homemade granola is a good thing to have around. Ours is meant to be not too sweet. We serve it over very tangy plain yogurt from upstate New York's Ronnybrook Farm dairy and add a swirl of local honey for people who want it a little sweeter.

4 Secrets to the Best Banana Bread You've Ever Had

We'd pretty much eat banana bread all day, every day if we could. And when we went on a mission to discover the perfect version, we pretty much did.

Steakhouse Salad with Red Chile Dressing and Peanuts

The steak can be marinated a day in advance—in fact, it gets better.

Macaroons and Matzo Together in One Dessert. That's Right.

We combined the flavors of two Passover classics—macaroons and matzo—in one addictive, caramel-and-chocolate-covered treat.

The Gorgeous Green and Pink Cake You Should Make for Passover

This naturally gluten-free and Kosher cake has a lot of color–and even more flavor.

Flourless Pistachio Cake With Strawberry Meringue

Make this stunning flourless pink and green cake for Passover or to end any and every spring celebration.

Tofu Yum-Yum Rice Bowl

The marinade is ridiculously delicious; you'll also want to use it on ribs or chicken.

Farro Spaghetti with Mushrooms and Hazelnuts

Chef Krajeck serves a similar dish at Rolf and Daughters; his hazelnut broth adds a clever layer of flavor.

Gluten-Free Shells with Beets, Ricotta, and Pistachios

Don't laugh—good gluten-free pastas exist.

Cauliflower-Cashew Soup With Crispy Buckwheat

Simmering vegetables in a covered pot over low heat so that they steam in their own liquid—a French technique called à l'étouffée—is the ticket to achieving a soup with pronounced depth. We love this method with cauliflower, but also try it with celeriac or rutabagas.

Almond-Crusted Trout with White Grits and Swiss Chard

The search for crispy trout skin stops here. Dredging the fish in ground almonds works wonders, adding a delightfully toasty exterior.
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