Thyme
Roasted Pears with Chestnut Honey
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from The Skinny: How to Fit into Your Little Black Dress Forever by Melissa Clark and Robin Aronson.
Roasting the pears in chestnut honey gives this dish a nice robust flavor, but if you don't have any around or don't feel like seeking it out at a specialty store, regular honey works well too. The sprinkling of cinnamon on top is a classic with the pears, but feel free to flavor this dish any way you'd like — our variation using black pepper and thyme lends the pears an unexpected sweet and savory twist.
Be sure to use firm Bosc pears here. Other varieties tend to fall apart.
Roasted Baby Potatoes with Thyme and Rosemary
For an extra special look, pick up a mix of white, red, and purple baby potatoes.
Roast Chicken with Spanish Paprika and Herb-Roasted Smashed Potatoes
Start this early in the day or the night before. Chilling the chicken uncovered for several hours makes the skin crispy when roasted.
Beef Braised in Red Wine
Brasato al Barolo
There is a bit of a contradiction inherent in this homey dish: Barolo isn't exactly a cheap cooking wine. Not to worry: The less-expensive bottles recommended below will produce an equally unctuous result.
Honey and Thyme Ice Cream with Candied Thyme
The sugared herb sprig is a super-easy, sophisticated garnish.
Rutabaga Purée with Cardamom and Thyme
Related to the turnip, rutabagas are slightly sweet, and their flesh has an orangey hue.
Red Wine Sauce
Serve with mustard-seed-crusted pork medallions.
IMPROV: Use chopped fresh rosemary in place of the thyme.
Rustic Bread Stuffing with Bell Pepper and Fresh Thyme
Here's a classic stuffing to suit all tastes. For a vegetarian version, substitute vegetable or mushroom broth.
Apple-Sausage Stuffing
This stuffing pairs perfectly with roast turkey.
Roast Heirloom Goose with Balsamic Vinegar
To save a step, rather than making the Balsamic Pan Sauce , drizzle an aged artisanal balsamic vinegar (12-year-old "vecchio" or 25-year-old "extra vecchio") over the carved portions of the goose. This recipe must be started at least a day ahead.
Prosciutto-Roasted Halibut with Fresh Thyme
Looking for an elegant entrée to serve on Christmas Eve? You just found it.
Rosemary-Roasted Turkey with Gravy
Chef Rathbun's method of roasting a turkey involves brushing the skin and packing the cavity with butter, then starting the roasting at a relatively high temperature — 450°F. As the turkey browns, the butter and turkey fat melt and pool under the grate, eliminating the need to add water to the pan juices. After 40 minutes, the oven is turned down to 350°F and the buttery drippings are used as a basting liquid. This technique seals in the bird's natural juices, producing crisp, golden skin and moist meat.
Stewed Turkey with Herbs and Onions
If you have never thought to boil a turkey, this 1623 recipe will make a believer out of you. While the original recipe calls for a whole bird, the modern recipe is adapted to use with prepackaged turkey pieces. If you would like use a small whole bird (10-12 pounds), cut it into ten pieces before boiling—it is really difficult and potentially dangerous to lift a whole steaming turkey from a pot of boiling broth. For this larger amount of turkey, you will need to double the other ingredients.
Roast Capon with Lemon, Thyme, and Onions
Capon's richness is perfectly complemented by mellow roasted onions and shallots. Though you can find frozen capons in almost every supermarket, we recommend ordering a fresh one from the butcher—the meat will be silkier and more delicious.
Grilled Poussins with Lemon Herb Butter
This is the ideal way to prepare young chickens, since there are two safeguards against their drying out (always a risk with small birds). The herbed butter slipped beneath the skin melts, basting and flavoring the meat as it cooks; the gentle, indirect heat lightly chars the skin without toughening the meat. As a result, every bite is juicy and perfectly seasoned.
Roasted Turbot on a Crisp Potato Cake with Teardrop Tomatoes and Gaeta Olives
The turbot is roasted on a thin cake of overlapping potato slices and then sauced with a simple pan sauce, garnished with tomatoes and black olives. Turbot is rarely available in the United States, but another flatfish such as a fluke or flounder makes a good substitute.
You will need a mandoline or other vegetable slicer to slide the potatoes very thin. Ovenproof nonstick frying pans work best here, so the potato cakes don't stick, but if necessary you can use other 8-inch frying pans or cake pans; line them with rounds of parchment paper.