Bon Appétit
Old-Fashioned Mincemeat Sauce
Serve this quick and easy sauce warm over vanilla ice cream or frozen yogurt.
Green Chili and Monterey Jack Quesadillas
A full-bodied Zinfandel would stand up well to the spicy chilies. Or offer frosty glasses of cold Mexican beer.
Creamy Scrambled Eggs with Herbs
By Michele Sbrana
Potato and Gruyère Croquettes
Great served as a side dish with roast chicken, pork chops or veal chops.
Huevos Rancheros
This simple but highly seasoned breakfast, brunch or supper dish became fashionable during the craze for Tex-Mex food that began in the Southwest and California in the 1940s. Our recipe highlights tortillas that are currently available in a variety of flavors, like sun-dried tomato and jalapeño.
White and Dark Chocolate Bread Pudding with Irish Cream Sauce
Rose Ann Pescheff of Watertown, Connecticut, writes: "My husband and I went to a friend's birthday dinner at Carmen Anthony Steakhouse in nearby Waterbury. The entire meal was good, but the bread pudding was outstanding — the perfect finishing touch. Since bread pudding is one of my husband's favorite desserts, I'd like to make it for him at home."
The liqueur-flavored sauce turns this rich dessert into something wonderfully decadent.
Mississippi Mud Cake with Bourbon-Espresso Glaze
Dense, moist and delectable, this homey cake has a lovely balance of flavors.
Roasted Root Vegetables with Rosemary
Roast these up to four hours ahead; put them in to reheat when the prime rib is done.
Spiced Chicken with Oranges
Chinese five-spice powder is available in the spice section of most supermarkets. Serve with: Steamed broccoli and an Asian rice pilaf mix. Dessert: Vanilla ice cream sandwiched between gingersnaps.
Pasta with Curry Seafood Sauce
"Athens, Georgia, has a great restaurant called The Basil Press," writes Linda Buchman of Hilton Head, South Carolina. "During my last visit there, chef Andrew Urell prepared an angel hair pasta with curried crab and shrimp. I'd love to try making it at home."
At the restaurant, this is served as a side dish for grilled salmon.
By Andrew Urell
Turkey and Broccoli Pot Pies
Have your butcher skin and bone the turkey thigh. Toss curly endive and radicchio with apple slices and cider vinaigrette for a salad. Orange sorbet with warm chocolate sauce and toasted pecans is a simple ending.
Chocolate-Covered Gingerbread Cake
So many German settlers carried their gingerbread treats to small towns around this country that the sweetly spiced cakes and cookies have become an all-American tradition. Coated with a chocolate ganache glaze, the homey cake of holidays past is transformed into a special-occasion dessert.
Cherry Linzertorte
This jam-filled pastry with a cookie-like dough takes its name from the town of Linz. The recipe uses cherry preserves for the filling. It makes enough dough for the torte and extra cookies. To make cookies, roll out dough to 1/4-inch thickness. Cut out decorative shapes and bake at 350°F on a parchment-lined sheet until golden, about 10 minutes.
Sangria Jell-O Salad
Until powdered gelatin came on the market in the 1890s, making gelatin molds was a labor-intensive endeavor. By the twenties, electric refrigeration and the Jell-O brand made the salads so easy to prepare that cookbooks were filled with recipes for them. This one incorporates the flavors of sangria. Serve it as a side dish or as a dessert.
Cuban Opera Cake
Melissa Harden of Omaha, Nebraska, writes: "To celebrate our recent engagement, my fiancé and I spent a long weekend at the Mondrian in Los Angeles. Our stay was perfect, as was dinner at the hotel's Asia de Cuba restaurant, where I couldn't get enough of the rich Cuban Opera cake."
A traditional Opera cake is made from very thin layers of cake, coffee buttercream, and coffee mousse — all covered with chocolate glaze. This version, which is perfect for a special occasion, is taller than your average Opera cake, owing to its thicker layers.