Bagna cauda, the simple Italian sauce of olive oil, anchovies and garlic, flavors strips of grilled zucchini and yellow squash. The excellent topping: crispy fried capers. This is collaborative ...
Charred Broccolini and cauliflower is served over a warm, garlicky bagna cauda sauce, and finished with pecorino and fried capers in this Italian-inspired winter side or starter.
Nancy Silverton, the James Beard award-winning chef and restaurateur, may be known for her magic touch with bread, pizza, and pastries, but in her cooking class for YesChef — a subscription-based ...
Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and fill a large bowl with ice water. Blanch the broccoli and cauliflower until crisp-tender, 3 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, transfer the vegetables to ...
If you’ve never sampled bagna cauda, get ready to fall in love. In his cookbook, Milk Street Shorts, culinary icon Christopher Kimball explains the appeal of the Italian favorite: “Made with garlic, ...
So you think you don’t like anchovies? Well, I think you’re wrong. Or at least I’d like to convince you otherwise. I, too, was once a hater of this oily, silver-skinned saltwater fish, and I blame it ...
2 tuna steaks, 6 to 8 ounces each (at least 2 to 4 inches thick) X to 1 pound spinach or arugula X red onion, thinly sliced 1 diced tomato (or oven-dried tomato when they are out of season) 2 ...
So you think you don’t like anchovies? Well, I think you’re wrong. Or at least I’d like to convince you otherwise. I, too, was once a hater of this oily, silver-skinned saltwater fish, and I blame it ...