Grilling
Ultimate Nachos
The key to crispy nachos is to limit the number of ingredients that go into the oven with the chips. These start with three essential ingredients: a dollop of homemade pinto bean dip, sliced jalapeños, and plenty of grated cheddar.
Chicken and Green Papaya Salad
The difference between this papaya salad and a Thai-style one comes down to spice and sugar, says Tanis. The Vietnamese one is sweeter and less hot. Have all the ingredients assembled, but dress the salad just before serving.
Brad's Campsite Jambalaya
If you decide to make this out in the wild, pack the perishables in a cooler.
Grilled Steak with Parsley-Parmesan Salad
The rich and beefy flatiron is also known as a top blade steak, but you can use any cut.
Grilled Hanger Steak with Cucumber Salad
We're hooked on the juicy and crunchy textures and sweet and spicy flavors in this steak and salad pairing.
Korean Steak Tacos
Koreans celebrate the first one hundred days of life, so for my son, Hudson's, hundredth-day party, we had a bash with lots of Korean food. The next day, with my taste buds toned and thinking of the great Korean tacos I've devoured at food trucks in Los Angeles, I created this version. The marinade for the steak is to die for. I guarantee you'll want to try it with Korean-style short ribs, pork tenderloin, and grilled chicken.
A little planning and prep a day ahead is a great way to save time on hurried weeknights. This steak gets even better with an overnight marinade, so you could marinate it on Monday, and it's ready to grill on Tuesday night. If you're doing it all on the same night, use the marinating time to multitask—prep your vegetables and whip up the guacamole. You'll be surprised how quickly it comes together.
Garden Chicken Alfredo
Yogurt subs for heavy cream, so it's lowfat and only tastes splurgy.
Steak Fajitas with Grilled Cabbage and Scallions
Whether you pile this spicy, marinated grilled steak and cabbage into warm tortillas or over a bowl of rice, the only thing you’ll wish is that you had made more.
Het Paa Naam Tok (Isaan-style Forest Mushroom Salad)
Flavor Profile: Spicy, tart, aromatic, salty, umami-rich
Try it with: Any Som Tam (Papaya salad and family) and/or Phat Khanaeng (Stir-fried Brussels sprouts). Needs Khao Niaw (Sticky rice).
The recipe for steak salad is a classic, but naam tok made with mushrooms is less common. Yet mushrooms are everywhere in Thailand and echo the texture and even the umami-rich flavor of animal flesh. Thailand has a long history of vegetarian food, for strict Buddhists and those celebrating Buddhist holidays. And while I rarely spend time considering the needs of vegetarians, I figured that if I swapped out the fish sauce in the original for thin soy sauce, then they'd have something to eat at Pok Pok.
Easy Steak Sauce with Seared Hanger Steak
A steak sauce good enough to rival the most popular brand makes this steak (or any, really) even more delicious.
Lamb Chops with Pomegranate Relish
The tart sweetness of the pomegranate cuts through the richness of the lamb.
Grilled Curried Mangoes with Ginger Ice Milk
Curry powder is a natural with mangoes, since they are both important foods in India. Grilling the mangoes softens them slightly and intensifies their sweetness. The curry powder helps to bring out their heady perfume. This is the perfect dessert for those times when you already have the outdoor grill fired up for cooking your main course.
Avocado-Alfalfa Turkey Burger
Tart, fruity pomegranate molasses brightens up the mellow turkey.
Strip Steak with Japanese Dipping Sauce
To give steaks a boost, Myers makes an herb rub (he likes to dry the herbs himself; if you don't have a microwave, sub in 1 teaspoon of each dried herb) and pairs the meat with a tart ponzu sauce (ponzu is available at Asian markets and some supermarkets).
Grilled Beef, Jícama, and Apple Salad
This Thai-inspired salad has that classic tart-sweet-spicy flavor balance that really gets your taste buds dancing. The cool, crunchy herb-laced salad is the yin to the yang of the rich tender beef. Whats more, the food processor does most of the work.
Juicy Bella
You know the Juicy Lucy, right? It's a cheese-stuffed burger that was born in Minneapolis in the 1950s, and legend has it that it got its name when the first patron took a bite and exclaimed, "That's one juicy lucy!" Well, my friend Erin Meister, who blogs as The Nervous Cook, sent me her take on it: a marinated portobello mushroom cap stuffed with a runny-yolk egg. A total umami bomb and, like the Juicy Lucy, a mess to eat. But when you're cooking for yourself who cares if you have egg on your face? Erin marinates the mushroom in a miso-vinegar mixture, but since I usually have Sesame Miso Vinaigrette on hand, it's perfect to use here, too. If you don't have it, substitute 1 tablespoon of white miso in 3 tablespoons of rice vinegar. If you don't have a grill, don't sweat it; you won't get the smoky tinge, but this works just fine instead, using a cast-iron skillet or grill pan fitted with a lid (or aluminum foil).
Lemon-Cured Chicken
Applying the rub to the chicken ahead of time infuses it with flavor.