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White Wine

Salmon Tournedos with Herb Sauce

This entrée from Chateau Lake Louise at Lake Louise, Alberta, Canada, would be perfect for a dinner party. The fish is especially good accompanied by broiled red onion slices and steamed asparagus. To make this even easier, have the salmon skinned and boned at the fish market.

Turkey Tonnato

Here, turkey stands in for the traditional veal in a do-ahead entré. Have your butcher bone, roll and tie the turkey breast.

Wine-Baked Onions with Herbed Crumb Topping

Serve these onions with pan-browned veal rib chops or roast chicken.

Veal with Prosciutto and Sage

Be sure to have the butcher bone the veal chops. Serve this elegant main course with vegetables.

Rib-Eye Steaks with Béarnaise Butter

Butter melting over a pan-fried steak mingles with its rosy juices, creating a luscious sauce right on the plate. For smaller appetites, these large steaks can be cut in half to serve four.

Risotto Croquettes with Mozzarella and Prosciutto

These are called arancini (little oranges).

Salmon Consommé with Créme Fraîche and Salmon Caviar

The créme fraîche topping melts fast, so to make the most of its fabulous taste and texture, add it just before eating.

Lemony Mushroom Risotto

This crowd-pleasing risotto works well as a main course—accompanied by green salad and crusty bread—or as a side dish for leftover chicken. Active time: 45 min Start to finish: 45 min

Cioppino

Cioppino is San Francisco's answer to bouillabaisse and, like that famous Provencal seafood soup, is made with a variety of the freshest fish possible. In San Francisco the mixture included Dungeness crab, which adds a unique flavor, but any regional crab will do. If crab is not available, substitute another shellfish. No clams? Try mussels. The point is to treat the following recipe as a guide and use whatever looks best in the market the day you make the soup.

Chicken Breast Amandine

Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
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