Dairy Free
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.
Sumac, Spelt, and Apple Cake
Sumac is a Middle Eastern spice with a tart, lemony flavor and the most beautiful deep red color. More commonly used in savory dishes, its citrus fragrance also works just as well in a sweet cake. The spelt flour gives this vegan number a rustic look and nutty taste, producing a delightfully crunchy crust that hides a soft, moist crumb underneath, with chunks of sweet apple running all the way through.
Monastery Salt
This flavored salt takes its name from Russian monks who flavored blackened salt with herbs from the monastery gardens.
The Best Alt-Milk For Baking
Oat milk is the best substitute for dairy in your freshly-baked muffins and more.
Spicy Tomato–Tuna Noodle Skillet Casserole With Aioli
This revamped tuna noodle casserole is homey, bright, and pantry-friendly. You’ll toast dry pasta in oil until golden brown before cooking it in the tomato sauce.
Braised Celery With Lentils and Garlic
Pan-searing, then quickly braising, celery in wine turns the humble vegetable into something worthy of a main course. (Of course, adding marinated lentils, crusty bread, and a fried egg doesn’t hurt.)
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.
Beet Tostadas With Fried Eggs
Beets can stand up to a hard roast and plenty of spice. Their sweet earthiness and firm texture mean they’re ideal for making meatless chorizo. If beets aren’t your thing, any sweet root vegetable will work.
Salsa de Árbol
This easy chile-spiked cooked tomato salsa pairs well with the beet-topped tostadas but is a great sauce all on its own.
One-Pot Gingery Chicken and Rice With Peanut Sauce
We took loose inspiration from Hainanese chicken rice to create this weeknight-friendly dish that retains the comforting and fragrant qualities of the beloved original.
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.
Pickle Potato Salad
This pickle brine–inspired dry rub turns potatoes and carrots crispy-creamy with pleasantly sharp vinegary tang. Toss them, still warm, with leftover shredded chicken and crunchy raw celery, onion, and yes, sliced pickles for a double-the-pickle, double-the-fun dinner salad.
Tangy Vinegar Chicken With Barberries and Orange
Dried barberries are incredibly tart, more so than any other dried fruit you’ll encounter. Look for them at Middle Eastern markets or specialty foods stores, or order them online.
Scallop Rice Bowls With Crunchy Spice Oil
The transformative power of our new favorite seedy, spicy, crunchy, garlicky oil is on full display in this dinner of simply seared scallops. A couple of drizzles adds a spice drawer’s worth of flavor in seconds.
Clams Arrabbiata
Slowly rendering the pancetta, gently toasting the garlic, and concentrating the tomatoes puts three pots’ worth of flavor in just one.
Tamarind-Glazed Black Bass With Coconut-Herb Salad
This sweet-and-sour glaze will work on other proteins like chicken, steaks, or ribs.
Goat Birria Tacos With Cucumber Pico de Gallo
Birria is usually served with a side of consomé, the rich pan juices from the roasted meat. This recipe takes things a step further by puréeing those juices with roasted vegetables and dried chiles.
Pickle Brine Spice Rub
The power of a tangy, vinegary brine, but in powdered form. This spice rub brightens and invigorates roasted chicken, seared fish and shines when sprinkled over vegetables before roasting. The cornstarch in the vinegar powder helps form an extra-crispy, extra-tart crust on anything you put it on.
Crunchy Spice Oil
This chile oil combines tons of texture from toasted whole spices and seeds with a just-spicy-enough heat level. Drizzle it over any, literally any, savory food you can think of.
Savory-to-Sweet Coffee Spice Mix
Use this coffee spice mix as a dry rub on chicken, steak, pork chops, or carrots for dinner, or fold into chocolate chip cookies, coffee cake, ice cream, and more for dessert—it plays happily on both sides of the field.