Grated fresh ginger and soy sauce team up to make a snappy sauce for the meat and vegetables in this recipe. Another time, substitute pork or lamb for the beef.
"Broccoli grows abundantly during the long summer days here in Alaska," Heidi Doudna explains from Fairbanks. "I like to harvest it and freeze it along with julienned carrots, so this is always ready to go. The two vegetables are wonderful together, and the judges at our state fair even awarded this dish a first prize." Skip links
This pasta dish was my last supper. I went out with a bang, three types of cheeses and somewhere around 3 pounds of vegetables. (What a way to go.) And what I mean to say [...]
After 30 years of camping, we've come up with an arsenal of surefire recipes. Our grilled sausage with veggies would be a superstar at a potluck. —Nancy Daugherty, Cortland, Ohio Skip links
This Asian Chicken with Gingered Vegetables recipe contains boneless skinless chicken breast halves, fresh sugar snap peas, brown sugar, carrot, reduced-sodium soy sauce and more.
Strips of round steak and chopped scallions are marinated with soy sauce and garlic, then quickly stir-fried with sesame seeds. Add a little sesame oil to the marinade if you like that flavor.
I grew up in the Midwest so that means I grew up eating casseroles. Casseroles are traditionally one-pot meals: meat, vegetables, and starches, baked all together. And what holds all that stuff together is usually the starch – noodles or mashed potatoes are probably the most common. Casseroles...
Christoffer Hruskova's extravagant and beef fillet recipe includes a daring smoked bone marrow and beetroot sauce. An experimental recipe which goes down a treat at his restaurant
Slow cooked beef chuck steak and hearty noodles is a family-pleasing meal. A Slow Cooker Favorite Even though a slow cooker is an all-season appliance, most of us still associate it's use with the colder
I found something similar to this years ago and have recently added my own spin. Here’s the outcome: an easy, cheesy meal your family can't get enough of. We don't have to tell them it's healthy. —Deborah Williams, Peoria, Arizona Skip links
My husband loves pasta; I cringe over the messy dishes. On Spaghetti Day, as he calls it, I make a one-pot saucy rotini that keeps everyone happy. —Lorraine Caland, Shuniah, Ontario Skip links
This recipe made it through the pickiest taste testers: my kids! They absolutely hate beans, but love, love, love these plump burritos. —Mindy Culver, Post Falls, Idaho Skip links