Parsley
Rutabaga Purée
From the Temple House in Ballymote, Ireland.
Chicken with Parsley and Thyme Stuffing and Roasted Potatoes
Nothing beats a good old-fashioned roast chicken with all the trimmings. Fresh herbs, crispy bacon, potatoes, sausages and a great gravy all add up to the kind of dish that creates nostalgia. Steamed baby carrots and sautéed shredded cabbage are proper accompaniments.
Shrimp Phyllo Purses with Tomato Chermoula Sauce
Chinese bean thread noodles (also called cellophane noodles) are often used in Moroccan dishes, like this starter. Their use stems from the influence of a small Vietnamese community in North Africa.
Asparagus Soup
Asparagus heralds spring! It still may be a little early, but as the asparagus season moves along, the stalks will be less woody.
Roasted Eggplant Salad with Capers and Onions
Roasted eggplant spreads and salads come in many variations throughout Greece and are usually embellished with local flavor. In the North, yogurt is often added to the eggplants, for example, throughout the Cyclades, it is the ubiquitous caper and tomato that season this delicious dish.
Flamboyant Calf's Liver with Caramelized Onions
This delicate cut of meat is ideally sautéed (a quick cook in butter or oil) until lightly browned. Don't overcook!
Gemelli with Garlic, Herbs, and Bocconcini Mozzarella
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
In this recipe hot pasta is tossed with an uncooked sauce of oil, herbs, a little vinegar, mozzarella, and raw garlic. The pasta absorbs some of the vinegar and oil and slightly melts the mozzarella. We call for bocconcini — bite-size pieces of mozzarella — but regular fresh mozzarella cut into 1/2-inch cubes would work just as well.
Tip: When incorporating raw garlic into a dish such as this, buy the freshest garlic you can find. The cloves should be dry and tightly packed together, and they should feel firm. Old garlic may impart a bitter, strong flavor — overwhelming the other components.
Scallop and Bacon Chowder
This elegant first course from American Seasons is topped with parsley oil, which is easy to make and could also be drizzled over roasted fish or steamed potatoes, and other vegetables.
Baked Baguette with Lemon-Garlic Butter
Lemon peel gives extra zip to this warm, garlicky bread. The recipe makes enough for everyone to have more than one helping.
Baked Herb-Crusted Chicken Breasts
Tenderize the boneless chicken breast halves by flattening them as you would for a chicken piccata, then marinating in lemon juice. What to drink: A crisp Sauvignon Blanc is ideal with both the breaded chicken and the asparagus risotto.
Roasted New Potatoes with Spring Herb Pesto
These also pair nicely with beef or lamb.
Open-Face Lamb Burgers with Mint Yogurt Sauce
Before spooning yogurt out of the carton, pour off any liquid on top. If you use a particularly thick yogurt, you may need to thin the sauce with a little water.
Shrimp with Garlic and Toasted Bread Crumbs
Gamberi Aragonati
Big shrimp crusted with garlic and crunchy bread crumbs were always a part of our family's Christmas Eve celebration. My father would peel and stuff pans full of fresh sweet shrimp, which would disappear faster than you can say Buon Natale! Easy to do, they are a pleasure to enjoy any time of the year. Don't forget the last squeeze of fresh lemon juice; it really brings out the flavor of the shrimp. Aragonati appears to be a dialect word for gratinati, meaning food that is baked under a browned crust. It has nothing to do with the herb oregano, though it is often misspelled oreganati.
Fried Mozzarella with Anchovies, Capers, and Garlic Sauce
Alexis Walker of Corvallis, Oregon, writes: "After many attempts to get a reservation, we finally succeeded in dining at Genoa restaurant in Portland. It was definitely worth the wait. The fried mozzarella was a revelation. Would you ask the chef for the recipe?"
Chopped Arabic Salad
This salad is wonderfully refreshing even without purslane, but if you can find the green at your produce market, it's worth using for the nice crunch it adds.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 30 min
Veal Prince Orloff
In this classic French dish, a veal roast is sliced and layered with a combination of soubise (onion) and duxelles (mushroom) stuffings, then put back together in the shape of the roast. Traditionally, it's covered with more stuffing and heavily coated with a Mornay sauce (which glazes the roast as it's heated in the oven). In our updated version, we keep the soubise and duxelles separate and arrange them side by side — black contrasting with white — on each veal slice, so the stuffings are visible. We use only a very thin coating of Mornay to glaze the dish, and serve the rest on the side.