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Spring

Lamb-Bacon Burgers with Spicy Aioli

At Rioja, half of the bacon is replaced with ground fatback, a step that makes this excellent burger even better.

What to Cook This Week: Spring Breeze Edition

Easy breezy weeknight dinners for the first week of May.

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.

What's the Score on Sorrel?

All of your sorrel questions, answered.

Chilled Watercress, Spring Nettle, And Sorrel Soup

Spring is abundant with greens of all types, both wild and cultivated. You never know what might show up at your market in any given week. It just so happened that I was able to get pepper y watercress, wild stinging nettles, and sour sorrel at the same time. I love the idea of a watercress or nettles soup, but it always leaves me wanting acid, which inevitably turns the vibrant green soup to a drab olive. Naturally sour sorrel solves this by adding brightness without acid to balance the flavor. If you have trouble finding nettles, just use more watercress, or substitute arugula, mizuna, or dandelion.

Pot-Roasted Artichokes with White Wine and Capers

In this dish, the fleshy artichokes get browned and crispy tops and look like strange, beautiful roses. The acidity in the white wine cuts through the rich, dense veg and, along with the salty pops from the capers, highlights the artichokes' unique herbaceousness.

Derby Mint Julep

This Derby-ready julep doubles down on the mint flavor with a bright Mint Simple Syrup and fresh mint leaves. The julep cup is essential to the presentation. This recipe yields about 1 1/4 cups mint simple syrup, enough for 30 cocktails. You can also use it to make a refreshing non-alcoholic drink—add a few tablespoons to club soda and serve over ice.

Tagliatelle with Asparagus and Parmesan Fonduta

This entire dish is right out of Rose and Ruthie's River Café playbook, with just a few tweaks of my own. They taught me how to make fonduta, a silky sauce rich with crème fraîche and egg yolks. It takes less time and just a bit more effort than tomato sauce, and turns a plate of pasta into an elegant and impressive meal. Get yourself some asparagus spears that are as thick as your pointer finger—not those thin or sprouty ones—and you'll enjoy the juicy slivers in each bite.

A Fresh, Light Italian Recipe for Every Night This Week

Asparagus, ramps, radishes: the good stuff is finally rolling into the farmers markets. This week, cook your way through it Italian-style. Why? Because Italians do a lot of things better—gelato is one of them, spring is another.

What to Cook This Weekend

What's that? You wanna take this outside? YOU WANNA TAKE THIS OUTSIDE?? Um, us too.

Fettuccine With Asparagus, Beet Green Pesto, and Poached Egg

Puréeing beet greens into pesto and tossing asparagus ribbons with fettuccine is a great way to incorporate healthy vegetables into pasta.

Snap Pea Salad

I admit that I'm hard on sugar snap peas. I get disappointed when they suck, of course, but I also get grumpy when they're anything less than perfect—unblemished, super sweet, and not a bit starchy. That's the curse of keeping high standards, I suppose: you're so rarely satisfied. When at last I do find perfect snap peas, I make this salad. I leave them raw—only the finest snap peas can be this delightful without a dunk in boiling water—and accentuate their flavor with little more than a lemony dressing and mint. If you'd like, you could add some creamy goat cheese in blobs or good old burrata alongside.

3 Surprising Ways to Cook With Carrots

Can carrots can go beyond soup and salad? We'll let these recipes for carrot pizza sauce, carrot pickles, and carrot steak—yes, steak—answer that.

Think You Know Carrots? Here's the Real Dirt

Everybody's favorite root vegetable is a little more mysterious—and a lot more delicious—than you think.

The Dead Simple, Meringue-Based Dessert You're Not Making

We riff on the classic dessert (but don't make it any harder to pull off).

Feta Snack with Spring Radishes

Though good with any fresh vegetable, this sharp, creamy feta dip, smoothed with a little buttermilk, is exceptional with crisp spring radishes. Much as in the combination above, salt and fat mellow any heat from the raw radishes. Cheesemaker Mary Rigdon of Decimal Place Farm has been brining her goat's milk feta to order for us every week since Miller Union opened. If you have a local farmers' market that sells fresh cheeses, look there first for good-quality feta. I love the little pink, purple, or red garden variety radishes for this dip.
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