Skip to main content

Lunch

Your Grilled Vegetables Deserve a Cheese Hug

Because burgers shouldn't get all the grill-melted cheese fun. 

Spring Green Bowls

Broccoli rice is the base for bright toppings like fresh peas, avocados, and pickled ginger. Round out the bowl with a creamy, herby dressing and a soft-boiled egg.

Sweet Pickle Potato Salad

The secret to this version of potato salad is sweet pickle relish—not diced cucumbers, dill pickles, or cornichons.

Cheesy Chicken Melt With All of the Onions Relish

Here’s a riff on the traditional patty melt, with perfectly cooked chicken breast and a big pile of caramelized onions. This recipe calls for a mixture of yellow onions, red onions, scallions, and fried shallots, but you can use any onions you have on hand.

Satay Lettuce Wraps

You can use ground turkey or chicken here, or swap in a vegetarian protein of your choice. 

Carrot Ribbon Salad With Ginger, Parsley, and Dates

This salad evolved from my father’s favorite road-trip snack—carrot sticks with roasted almonds, lemon juice, and salt. I’ve punched it up with fresh ginger, lots of parsley, and dates.

Big-Batch Marinated Lentils

Stirring a simple vinaigrette into warm just-cooked lentils helps them drink up flavor so they taste anything but plain. Use French green or black beluga lentils as they will hold their shape best. You can keep a batch of these dressed lentils in the fridge and add to salads, pastas, soups, and more all week long.

Crunchy Pickle Salad

We tend to favor pickles that are bright with acid and low on sugar; anything labeled “half-sour” usually fits the bill. If using sweeter pickles, add a bit more vinegar and salt.

Wood Ear and Cilantro Salad

You need a bigger bowl and more water than you might think to rehydrate wood ear mushrooms—they nearly triple in size.

How Big-Batch Cooking Will Help You Make Dinner (and Breakfast) (and Lunch) With Your Ingredient Stash

You might have more groceries in your house than ever before. Here's how to make the best use of everything you've got.

33 Ideas for Lunch at Home

Quick lunches, no repeats.

Fragrant Mixed Herb and Flatbread Salad

The salad works best with strips of Persian flatbread, but plain tortillas work just as well. The addition of golpar, with its citrusy aroma, really lifts this dish, accentuating the sweetness of the pomegranates and adding a wonderful depth of flavor, so try and track some down if you can.

Torshi Tareh (Persian Sour Herb Stew With Marbled Eggs)

This Northern Iranian dish traditionally features wild greens. This version is made with braised spinach, herbs, and eggs—and gets a vibrant boost of flavor from lime juice.

Chile and Ginger–Fried Tofu Salad With Kale

In this spicy salad, cubes of fried tofu act like tender-bellied croutons amid the leaves of baby kale, only with much more protein and spunk than the usual toasted bread.

You Have Time for Cassoulet As Long As It's Not Actually Cassoulet

No time for project cooking? This non-cassoulet is just, like, toast. And you definitely have time for toast.

Spinach and Olive Turkey Burgers

These turkey burgers are my nod to the Mediterranean, packed with fresh herbs, lemon, and red onion.

Amazuzuke (Quick Vinegar Pickles)

I serve these pickles like a salad as a side with ramen noodles, gyoza (fried dumplings), or shumai (steamed dumplings), or with a sandwich. 

Move Over, Crispy Chickpeas. Crispy Lentils Are Here

Make lentils into your new favorite crunchy soup and salad toppers, no pre-cooking required. 

Chickpea and Chorizo Tostadas

Mashing some chickpeas into the sizzling chorizo adds heft while keeping this meal light on the meat
13 of 398