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  1. How To Boil Red Potatoes Recipes - Yahoo Recipe Search

    Garlic Butter Boiled Potatoes Recipe (How to Boil Potatoes)
    Yummly
    Garlic Butter Boiled Potatoes Recipe (how To Boil Potatoes) With Red Chili Flakes, Fresh Herbs, Bacon, Small Potatoes, Salt, Butter, Olive Oil, Black Pepper, Garlic
    Bread Patties Recipe-Bread Pakora-How to make Bread Pakoda
    Yummly
    Bread Patties Recipe-bread Pakora-how To Make Bread Pakoda With Boiled Potatoes, Gram Flour, Bread Slices, Curry Leaves, Green Chilies, Ginger Root, Garlic, Onion, Coriander Leaves, Chutney, Garlic Chutney, Mustard Seeds, Cumin Seeds, Asafoetida Powder, Turmeric Powder, Red Chili Powder, Seeds, Salt
    Egg biryani recipe | How to make easy egg biryani
    Yummly
    Egg Biryani Recipe | How To Make Easy Egg Biryani With Oil, Basmati Rice, Ginger Garlic Paste, Capsicums, Onion, Green Chilies, Boiled Eggs, Medium Tomato, Turmeric, Red Chili Powder, Biryani Masala, Mint Leaves, Salt, Yogurt, Water, Star Anise, Bay Leaf, Shahi Jeera, Green Cardamoms, Cloves, Cinnam
    Egg Biryani Recipe - How To Make Easy Egg Biryani
    Yummly
    Egg Biryani Recipe - How To Make Easy Egg Biryani With Oil, Rice, Garlic Paste, Potato, Onion, Green Chilies, Boiled Eggs, Tomato, Ground Turmeric, Red Chili Powder, Biryani Masala, Mint Leaves, Salt, Yogurt, Water, Star Anise, Bay Leaf, Shahi Jeera, Cumin, Green Cardamoms, Cloves, Cinnamon Stick, M
    Mortar and Pestle Garlic Aioli
    Food and Wine
    My bible for life in the south of France is Richard Olney’s Lulu’s Provençal Table. It’s a book that not only chronicles the intuitive regional cooking and joie de vivre of Lucie “Lulu” Peyraud—matriarch of the legendary wine estate Domaine Tempier in Bandol—but also celebrates the importance of tradition and sharing “at table.” I’ve been fortunate to sit at Lulu’s table twice. The first time she was 95 years old and still swimming in the Mediterranean every day. The second time was last summer. At 100, I found her living a life less aquatic but every bit as spirited.Lulu and her daughter, Laurence, greeted us on the terrace under the shade of maritime pines where she’s hosted countless guests, from harvest lunches for her large family of seven children to intimate meals shared with dear friends like Alice Waters.Before lunch, Lulu led me into her kitchen to show me her collection of mortars and pestles. The largest white marble mortar, with a wooden pestle and four knob-like handles, was filled with aioli the color and texture of lemon curd. She said that the mortier came with the house, which her father inherited in 1917, and offered to Lulu and her husband, Lucien, in 1940. The edges of that mortar, rounded and chipped, spoke to more than a century of use making sauces like rouille and pistou—and aioli.The word aioli means “garlic oil,” and it’s a noun for both the mayonnaise-like sauce and the exuberant meal, or Le Grand Aioli, where the sauce is star. In her recipe, Lulu calls for a whole head of garlic, but I find that far too potent for my non-Provençal palate. I typically use just two cloves—sometimes more, especially in late spring when fresh bulbs from the new garlic crop arrive at my farmers market.It takes patience, and a few tries, to master making aioli with a mortar and pestle. I’ve learned to use a fine-tipped squeeze bottle to administer the oil in consistent drops at the start before an emulsion forms. Classic aioli contains no lemon juice or acid of any kind; the bite of garlic provides the sole counterpoint to the richness of the olive oil and egg yolks. The finished sauce is unctuous, thick, and velvety smooth—and adds immense flavor to anything you dunk in it.On that June day, Lulu served platters of steamed sweet potatoes, green beans, beets, artichokes, and carrots alongside boiled eggs and poached salt cod. She poured a 2015 Domaine Tempier Bandol rouge, slightly chilled, and kept her glass full throughout lunch. The rest of us coveted the estate’s legendary rosé at first, but soon switched to the red and noted how both were equally adept at mingling with all that garlic.This is a recipe for those who take pleasure in two things: the flavor of raw garlic and deliberate, meditative cooking. Beyond the superior quality of an aioli made in the mortar, to me, the tool has become more than a means to the end. Making aioli by hand gives me a rare moment of calm focus—a spiritual moment in the kitchen. And it’s cooking traditions like this, found the world over, that we must consciously preserve for generations to come.
    Rustic Squash Noodles with Brown Butter Pecan Manchego Sauce
    Food52
    I attempted to swap roasted squash in for the potato in the potato trofie recipe from the book Pasta by Hand. The texture of the dough seemed right, so I started to shape the trofie. I had conveniently forgotten what a slow process shaping trofie was. I decided to just shape enough for a supper side for two, then put the rest of the dough in the fridge. I pondered how to shape rest of the dough so the next morning I turned some into simple gnocchi. When boiled the texture was too chewy and dense. I rolled the rest of the dough into a thin rectangle, then cut it into rustic noodles which gave the relative simplicity and good texture I was looking for. To sauce the noodles I went with a classic brown butter and sage combo, with some pecans to add texture and reinforce the nutty notes from the brown butter and squash. The end result was good, but a bit on the sweet side. I remembered a simple buttered noodle with Manchego cheese recipe from the Toro Bravo cookbook, so I made another batch of noodles and added some grated Manchego for the salty and savory flavors the sauce lacked. Success! Here is that iteration: