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Fettuccine with Tomatoes, Bacon, Arugula and Goat Cheese
Spicy crushed red pepper, rosemary and garlic enhance this main course. Uncork an Italian Barbera to match the menu's hearty flavors. For dessert, offer a compote of blueberries and sliced nectarines with crème fraîche (available at many supermarkets) or lightly whipped cream.
Annabel's Pasta Salad
This salad's delicious dressing is popular with my children as a dip for vegetables (I make a bottle of it to keep in the refrigerator). The salad is great for lunch boxes, or as a side dish served warm or cold. Use three-color pasta, if possible.
Preparation: 10 minutes/Cooking: 12 minutes
Nutritional information: Rich source of beta-carotene, fiber, and folic acid
By Annabel Karmel
Mushroom, Radish, and Bibb Lettuce Salad with Avocado Dressing
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Jerk Pork on Red Pepper Mayo and Black-Eyed-Pea Cakes
As any southerner will tell you, eating black-eyed peas at New Year's will ensure good luck. For a simpler (and meatless) version of this hors d'oeuvre, omit the pork and serve these tender little cakes topped with just the red pepper mayo.
Spinach, Beet and Walnut Salad
Food writer Janet Fletcher says, "During my childhood, the only salad on the Thanksgiving buffet was an old-fashioned Waldorf with chopped apples, celery, walnuts and mayonnaise. Frankly, I don’t miss it. This contemporary salad has the walnuts and the crunch, but is much fresher and far more inviting."
By Janet Fletcher
Buttermilk Soup with Cucumber and Crab
Low-fat buttermilk and nonfat yogurt provide the base in a refreshing, tangy soup.
Artichoke Olive Dip with Fennel Crudites
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less but requires additional unattended time.
Feta with Pepper Honey
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
We like to serve this feta on crackers as an hors d'oeuvre. Thinly sliced into single-serving portions, it also makes a lovely sweet-yet-savory dessert.
Crabmeat Martin
Joe Martin was both a hero and a mentor to me. He was an old-fashioned New Orleans kitchen guy who never had national fame as a chef, but he could cook better than a lot of household names. Not only that, he was a great teacher, developing an army of everyday workers who were the backbone of good food served all over town. The funny thing is, for all the people he taught, he never wrote down his best dishes. He used to make this one hunched over like it was a big secret. I pieced the recipe together from some of the guys he taught. Joe, if you're looking down on this dish from someplace where the work isn't so hard, I hope you don't think we're leaving something out!
By Andrew Jaeger and John DeMers