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Neapolitan ragù, an Italian meat sauce [12] Ragù alla salsiccia, an Italian sausage-based sauce [13] Saltsa kima, a Greek topping for spaghetti. [14]: 124 Satsivi, a Georgian dish of chicken in walnut sauce. Sausage gravy, a sausage-based white sauce served with or over biscuits in the American south. [15]
Tartar sauce (French: sauce tartare; often spelled tartare sauce in the UK, Ireland, and Commonwealth countries) is a condiment made of mayonnaise, chopped pickles or relish, capers, and herbs such as tarragon and dill. Tartar sauce can also be enhanced with other herbs, lemon juice, and olives.
Tarragon is one of the four fines herbes of French cooking and is particularly suitable for chicken, fish, and egg dishes. Tarragon is the main flavoring component of Béarnaise sauce. Fresh, lightly bruised tarragon sprigs are steeped in vinegar to produce tarragon vinegar. Pounded with butter, it produces an excellent topping for grilled ...
If you’ve seen (or heard of) Ina Garten’s creamy sausage pasta, then you’re probably as eager as we are to taste-test the recipe. After all, the Barefoot Contessa, 75, has never let us down ...
Lo Mein Noodles with Chinese Sausage and Gai Lan. Lap cheong are small, fully cooked Chinese sausages that look red and wrinkled. They're a little dry and chewy, kind of like a dry salami, and are ...
A classical Bolognese dish, made with tagliatelle egg pasta (long, flat ribbons that are similar in shape to fettuccine and are typically about 6.5 mm to 10 mm wide), with the traditional Bolognese sauce made of tomato and minced beef (NB: Although very popular abroad, a dish named spaghetti alla bolognese does not exist in the Italian ...
In a large bowl, using your hands, combine beef, pork, sausage, onion, and garlic; season with salt and pepper. Gently stir in bread crumb mixture, eggs, Parmesan, and parsley until just combined ...
A living tradition, such as cooking, is always subject to variation and re-creation. For example, in his memoirs, the late Pierre Franey, former chef at Le Pavillon and long-time New York Times columnist, vividly recalled his trepidation when as a teenaged apprentice chef, he was ordered to prepare a simple "omelette aux fines herbes—three eggs, chervil, parsley, tarragon, chives—the first ...