Rosemary
Veal Bocconcini with Porcini and Rosemary
Though you may associate bocconcini with the tiny mozzarella balls sold at Italian markets and cheese shops, the word simply means "little bites" (the veal in this stew is cut into bite-size pieces). When purchasing dried porcini, look for packages containing large, flat, recognizable slices of the mushroom.
Active time: 35 min Start to finish: 1 3/4 hr
Grilled Leg of Lamb with Spiced Mustard and Rosemary
Start marinating the lamb one day before you plan to serve it.
Rosemary-Semolina Round with Sesame and Sea Salt
Semolina flour, made from durum wheat, is sometimes labeled "pasta flour."
Mustard- and Rosemary-Roasted Game Hens
Roasted red potatoes and a spinach salad would make good accompaniments.
Fettuccine with Summer Squash and Rosemary Butter
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Veal Shoulder with Porcini Mushrooms, Garlic and Rosemary
Start making this at least one day ahead.
Roast Leg of Lamb with Rosemary and Garlic
(Arrosto di Agnello alla Toscana)
Roasted meats are simple by definition, and in Tuscany they are not just simple, but pure and filled with flavor, too. Lamb is one of the Tuscans' favorite meats to roast. The seasonings in this recipe reflect the Tuscan countryside, with its wild rosemary and the aroma of garlic in the air. Though garlic is ever-present in the cooking, it is generally used in moderation so that it doesn't overpower the other flavors.
Roast Chicken with Herb Butter, Onions and Garlic
Serve this with the Crispy Potato Galette, buttered green beans and a red Côtes du Rhône or white Burgundy.
Quince in Syrup
(Mele Cotogne in Giulebbe)
Poached quinces in a clove-and-cinnamon-scented syrup are served at Rosh Hashanah and to break the fast at Yom Kippur. In this version, the quinces are left unpeeled for the preliminary cooking in water, and then peeled and cooked in syrup. In La cucina livornese, Pia Bedarida recommends peeling the quinces, letting them rest to take on a reddish brown color as they oxidize, and then cooking them in syrup. Other cooks peel the quinces and cook them immediately, but suggest saving the peels and seeds and cooking them along with the sliced quinces. Still another recipe uses wine instead of water.
Rosemary Chicken with Broccoli Rabe
Clyde's Restaurant Group owns several successful restaurants in the Washington, D.C., area. Tom Meyer, head of restaurant development, is especially fond of this popular dish, served with mashed potatoes at Clyde's of Chevy Chase. If you can't find broccoli rabe (an Italian green), collard greens, Swiss chard or mustard greens will work well also.
Mustard Vinaigrette
This recipes was created to accompany Roast Chicken with Mustard Vinaigrette and Potato Salad with Haricots Verts, Roquefort and Walnuts.
Tomato Tartlets
Tartlettes de Tomates
Salmon with Breadcrumb, Olive and Sun-Dried Tomato Crust
"Dinner at the Montauk Seafood Grill was an ideal way to cap off a day of skiing in Vail," Julie Harris of Redwood City, California. "The salmon covered with an unusual breadcrumb coating is something I would like to make for a dinner party."
A Nineties Twist to a Grandmother's Roast Chicken
My grandmother made a great Friday night dinner in her two-story limestone in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. She might as well have run a restaurant. There was lots and lots and lots of stuff—kreplach, gribenes, gefilte fish, blintzes, homemade noodles, roast chicken, glazed carrots, egg barley with dried Polish mushrooms. In 1918 during an influenza epidemic my grandmother was 20 years old with two children. First her husband died and two days later her mother died. With eight younger siblings and two of her own, she took care of ten kids in the family. Then an aunt caught the flu and died leaving eight or nine children. My grandmother then married her uncle and raised 18 kids.
The secret to her roast chicken was to cook it long enough to render the fat from the chicken and make it crispy.
—Eddie Schoenfeld, New York restaurateur
Rosemary Garlic Red-Wine Vinegar
Flavored vinegars can be used to enliven dressings and marinades, finish pan sauces, or pickle vegetables--and they make wonderful gifts. Once the steeping is completed, these vinegars keep for several months. (Garnishes and other solids left in the jar, however, may discolor or break down.)