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Potato Salad with Buttermilk Dressing
Buttermilk and lemon juice add some tang; carrots and celery add crunch.
Plum Soup with Honeydew Tarragon Ice
This recipe makes more honeydew ice than you'll need for the soup, but it's also terrific spooned into our plum limeade. And this dish, like the limeade, is one that you'll want to serve right away so that the soup won't begin to darken.
Fennel, Watercress, and Endive Salad with Toasted Pine Nuts
Italians like to have salad after the entrée, so do the same, if you like.
Irish Brown Bread with Smoked Salmon
This bread is adapted from Jean Lemlin's recipe, from our March 1994 issue.
Fresh Corn Soup
This simple seasonal soup depends on a single farm-fresh ingredient: corn. Its essence is captured in this purist's purée.
Velvety Chilled Corn Soup
This elegant first course is ideal for entertaining, because everything can be prepared a day ahead (just chop up all the toppings and refrigerate them until ready to use).
Pasta with Squid, Tomatoes, and Capers
There are two ways to get tender squid: a very quick sauté or a very long simmer. This simple yet impressive recipe uses the former method. We call for a Thai or serrano chile because they're easier to find here — try your local supermarket — than the small, thin Italian hot chiles.
Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 1 hr
Baked Stuffed Mushrooms with Crab
These crab-stuffed mushrooms are a longtime favorite at Phillips. Tip: Use a melon baller to scoop out the mushroom stems.
Grilled Sweet-and-Spicy Shrimp with Mint Dipping Sauce
Golden brown sugar brings out the natural sweetness of the shrimp.
Classic Escargots à la Bourguignonne
This appetizer can be made with the leftover snails from Scallops with Snail-Garlic Butter and Leeks .
Grilled Calamari with Arugula
Squid can vary quite a bit in size. If you get lots of little squid (under 2 inches each, not including tentacles), they'll need less preparation. Larger ones need to be scored to stay tender.
Spicy Black Bean Soup
"For me, cooking is a very relaxing and creative process — I just wish I had more time for it," writes Katherine Burk of Seattle, Washington. "I make a point of fixing dinner during the week, but with my hectic schedule (I work in information technology), there are some nights I'm too wiped out to attempt anything more complicated than a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Usually, though, I can put something together — my spicy black bean soup, for example — in under thirty minutes."
A southwestern favorite, simplified: Most of the ingredients are pantry staples.
By Katherine Burk