This quick Swiss chard recipe incorporates the stems and the greens. It's a great side dish or can make a good filling or topping for pizza, a frittata, galette and more. You can use this same ...
“Cooking without recipes is a kitchen skill, same as cutting vegetables or flipping an omelet,” writes Sam Sifton, The New York Times food editor and founding editor of NYT Cooking, in the ...
Enjoy swiss chard and white beans as a meal or side dish. Read more about Aube Giroux's time with Karen Kitchen Vignettes. In a heavy-bottomed pot or pan on medium heat, cook the chopped onions in the ...
We are all looking for ways to get more leafy greens into our diets. One way is to bake them into a versatile savory tart that you can serve for any meal of the day, including as a main course for ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... No one is quite sure why the leafy green is called “Swiss” chard, mainly by speakers of English only. Other languages and peoples call it merely “chard” or ...
Inspired by a dish from the Kitchen restaurant in Boulder, Colorado. This quick recipe incorporates pancetta-which, like other cured meats, is a classic partner for chard. Heat oil in a large pot over ...
Oil-cured olives (also called dry-cured) showed up often on my Sicilian grandmother's table. They would dot her rectangular pizzas or show up as antipasto alongside sharp cheeses, pickled artichoke ...
What He’s Known For: Real-deal regional-Mexican cooking that makes the most of San Francisco’s market produce. “YOU EAT first with your eyes,” said chef Gonzalo Guzmán of these enchiladas. On that ...