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When you own over 100 cookbooks, it is time to stop buying, and start cooking. This site chronicles a cookbook collection, one recipe at a time.

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Fava Beans with Mint, Lemon & Pistachios
100+ Vegetarian RecipesGluten Free RecipesSide Dish RecipesSpringWhole Food Plant-Based Diet Recipes

Fava bean fans, this one’s for you. Flash-cooked favas are tossed with olive oil, plenty of mint, Parmesan, lemon zest, pistachios and dried rose petals for a bright little spring side dish that’s equally good piled onto pasta (or salad greens).

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This is the time of year we load up on fava beans. At the market they arrive in puffy bright green pods, stacked high in crates. Preparing them is a labor of love, in part because most of the time you need to first remove the beans from their pods, then slip them from their skins after a quick boil. It’s not as taxing as it sounds – the beans pop quickly from their pods, and peeling them is the kind of kitchen task you can assign to someone while you sit around and chat.
Fava beans with mint, pistachio, and lemon in a bowl
That said, true luxury is walking into a kitchen to discover a bowl of perfectly cooked and shelled favas ready to go. Which is exactly what happened last night (xoxo Wayne!). I grabbed for whatever I had nearby – nuts, cheese, herbs, lemon, dried rose petals –  and it all came together into something so pretty and delicious I couldn’t resist popping off a few photos so I could share the recipe.

You can take this in plenty of directions depending on what you have on hand. Pecorino or crème fraîche work well in place of the Parmesan, and toasted almonds are a good stand-in for pistachios. Basil or dill are great alternatives to the mint.
Fava beans with mint, pistachio, and lemon in a bowl
If you want to make more of a meal out if it, pile everything onto bruschetta with a thick slather of ricotta or goat cheese. And come to think of it, you can cook this pizza dough with a slather of ricotta, goat cheese and/or mozzarella, and use the favas to scatter across the pizza once out of the oven. Also, while it’s not at all the same – you can do a version of this using edamame.

A couple quick fava tips before jumping into the recipe. Fava beans change dramatically throughout the season, and you start to get a feel from them over time. A lot of people love the smallest favas, they sometimes have skins tender enough to leave on. I tend to look for medium-to-large fava beans, but not so large they start to get starchy and hard. There’s a sweet spot and eventually you’ll start to recognize it.

More Recipes Featuring Fava Beans

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Skillet Jam
100+ Vegetarian RecipesBasic TechniquesBreakfast RecipesGluten Free RecipesQuick RecipesWhole Food Plant-Based Diet Recipes

Skillet jams are inherently laid-back, made to enjoy right away. Without the need for preserving, you can scale back the sugar and let the fruit’s natural flavor really pop. This is a version from a special new cookbook, Eating at Home by Trinity Mouzon Wofford.

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This skillet jam is for all of you who love homemade jam, but find traditional canning a bit much – the sterilizing, the jars, the ratios, etc. It comes from an absolute gem of a new cookbook, Eating at Home by Trinity Mouzon Wofford, and it is as simple as it is flavorful. This easy-breezy approach to jam-making delivers intensely bright, not overly sweetened spreads – beautiful swiped across thick slabs of sourdough. If you’re a smoothie fan with a freezer stocked with berries, you’re already half way there. Skillet jam in a pot after cooking
One of the things I love most about skillet jams is that, because they’re meant to be eaten fresh – say, within a week, refrigerated – they don’t need to be shelf stable. As a result, they use just a fraction of the sugar required to preserve conventional jams. Let’s talk a bit more about the jam, and then I’ll share some favorite aspects of the cookbook.

Skillet Jam: Ingredients
  • Fruit: You can use fresh or frozen fruit here. I’ve found that using frozen berries is a great way to use up any fruit accumulated in my freezer.
    Frozen fruit for making easy skillet jam
  • Lemon: I like to use a Y-peeler to remove the lemon rind, then slice it thinly with a sharp knife rather than using a microplane. The zest ends up with more structure,  so it doesn’t disappear as the jam cooks.
    Rubbing lemon zest into sugar with fingers
  • Sugar: granulated. You rub the lemon zest into the sugar with your fingertips.
    Sugar and lemon zest in a pot
  • Salt: To balance out the sweetness a bit.

Fruit for jam simmering in a wide pot

Skillet Jam: Inspiration

I came across this skillet jam in Eating at Home. This is a complete charmer of a cookbook – one that I bought at the neighborhood bookstore a few blocks from our house. I stop in often to see what’s new, and while I don’t always leave with something, this one felt like it needed to come home with me.
Eating at Home cookbook cover
Eating at Home cookbook Table of Contents

The full title is Eating at Home: The Nourishing Practice of Everyday Cooking. A quick flip through – the food looked gorgeous, the recipes very approachable, and the vibe wholesome and encouraging. Trinity Mouzon Wofford writes about cooking on a shoestring budget for a family of four, noting, “…I quickly noticed our dollars went furthest at the local farmers market. As the seasons passed, I learned to look past the ephemeral strawberries to the hardworking root vegetables and greens that would form the foundations of our meals. I discovered that shiitake and oyster mushrooms could sub in for the richness of meat at a fraction of the cost.” It’s the kind of book I can imagine giving as a gift for a wide range of people. It encourages the practice and celebration of simple home-cooked meals, and the importance of slowing down in a hectic, scary world to make space for good, intentional meals.
Eating at Home cookbook page picturing skillet jam and sourdough bread on a cutting board
The book design is what initially caught my attention – the brown and yellow palette, woodblock illustrations, and bright lime endpapers. It uses Falcon Nuvo and Broadsheet fonts, with illustrations by Issey Kobori, Trinity’s husband. Design by Emma Campion, photos by Dane Tashima. The whole package comes together beautifully.

More Trinity:

Strawberries and raspberries in a pot starting to simmer for jam
Skillet jam in a pot after cooking and filling glass jar
So, keep your eyes peeled for Eating at Home, be sure to flip through it if you get a chance. And in the meantime, definitely make a round of this skillet jam. We’ve been enjoying ours all week, I made ours with (frozen) raspberries and strawberries and it is perfect on sesame sourdough.

More Berry Recipes

 

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Cottage Cheese Wraps
100+ Vegetarian RecipesBaking RecipesBreakfast RecipesDinner IdeasGluten Free RecipesHigh Protein RecipesLow Carb RecipesMain Course RecipesQuick Recipes

Cottage cheese wraps are a great foundation recipe! They’re high in protein, wildly versatile, and super satisfying, You can stuff them with a wide range of fillings, drizzles, and spreads depending on the season. Here are all my tips and tricks and favorite ways to enjoy them.

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There was a point a couple years back when the algorithm decided I needed to know about cottage cheese wraps. They looked so tasty! They were everywhere! They seemed to be a breeze to make! You pool a quick-blended mixture of cottage cheese and eggs onto a rimmed sheet pan and bake until golden on the bottom. Pile on a bunch of fillings, roll up tight, and enjoy.  I was on-board. It’s a great concept, a satisfying meal, and endlessly adaptable. I’m still not sure where the concept originated, but I’ve learned a number of tips and tricks related to making these wraps (and favorite fillings) that I’m going to share today. The deep dive.
Cottage cheese wraps on a plate

Cottage Cheese Wraps

Cottage cheese wraps are a breeze to make, but you do have to be mindful of a couple details the first few times through the process to avoid issues:

  • Don’t over-process the mixture in your blender. 15-20 pulses does the job, resulting in a smooth batter.
  • Yes, you need to use parchment paper.
  • Spread the batter across your sheet pan gently, to a uniform thickness. Too thin, it is more likely to crack.
    Cottage cheese wrap batter on a rimmed baking sheet before baking
  • Bake until the wrap is very golden on the bottom, this is right around 30 minutes in my oven. This is the color you’re after, or even a bit darker!
    Cottage cheese wrap on a rimmed baking sheet after baking
  • After removing from the oven, let the wrap set for a bit. Roughly 3-5 minutes is about right. It’s less likely to break apart as you’re filling and rolling.
    Cottage cheese wrap after rolling
The Ingredients

To make the wrap component of cottage cheese wraps you need three things: cottage cheese, eggs, and a bit of salt. You can accent from there with abandon. I tend to spice my batter with whatever spice blend I’m fixated on at the time, but herbs, peppers, and pastes are also favorites.

  • Cottage Cheese:  For this recipe I always use low-fat cottage cheese. Typically 1.5%-2% I’ve found that different brands of cottage cheese impact the thickness of the batter, sometimes it is more runny than other times. If you feel like your batter is regularly too runny, use 2 eggs instead of 3. If you feel like your batter is too thick use 3 eggs in place of 2. I find two eggs usually gives me a nice consistency that is easy to pour and work with on the pan.
  • Eggs: Good quality, large.
  • Accents: Some favorites include chopped chives (pictured), chopped serrano chile, a couple pieces of turmeric plus freshly ground black pepper, madras curry powder, toasted onion powder.
Cottage Cheese Wrap: Variations

The variations here are endless. A few ideas to flavor the wrap component:

  • Furikake: add a couple teaspoons of citrus furikake to the wrap mixture prior to baking.
  • Turmeric & Black Pepper: add 1/4 teaspoon ground turmeric and a few cranks of freshly ground black pepper to your batter.
  • Double allium: Add some good onion powder along with a bunch of chopped chives to your batter.
  • Za’atar: add a teaspoon or two of za’atar to the batter. This goes especially well if you use labneh as a spread filling.
  • Olives: Finely chopped black olives work well here, just make sure to chop them extra fine, and stir them in after blending.
Cottage cheese wraps on a plate
Cottage Cheese Wrap Filling Ideas:

My goal when I make these is: one wrap meal. I’m going for an all-in-one situation. Filling the wraps with something green is usually where I land.

  • Kale Salad: I like to stem and chop a half bunch lacinato kale. Massage with 1-2 teaspoons of good-tasting vinegar, and 1-2 teaspoons of olive oil, and a bit of salt until it collapses, add some avocado, toasted seeds, cherry tomatoes, etc. and use for your wrap filling.
    Cottage cheese wrap filled with kale before rolling
  • Broccoli and Winter squash: Pictured below is a wrap smeared with chive-flecked labneh, and topped with simple oven-roasted broccoli, thin crescents of delicata squash, sliced green onions, and a smear of sriracha. Calabrian chili paste is a good alternate here on the spicy front. Also, a few toasted pumpkin seeds. To roast the vegetables, toss them in a bit of olive oil, sprinkle with salt, and roast in the 350°F / 176°C oven until golden brown. You can do this at the same time you are baking the cottage cheese mixture. It’s the wrap also pictured in the lead photo.
    Cottage cheese wrap with fillings before rolling up
  • Labneh: Use a smear of labneh (homemade labneh is the best!) across the wrap before adding other fillings and rolling. You can see labneh used as a spread in the lead photos here.
  • Chili crisp
  • Roasted cherry tomatoes
  • Pesto
  • Pan-blistered artichoke hearts
More Cottage Cheese Recipes

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Simple Red Fruit Salad
100+ Vegetarian Recipes260+ Vegan RecipesDessert RecipesGluten Free RecipesHeidi's FavoritesQuick RecipesSpringSummer

Red fruit salad made with plump strawberries, sweet cherries, lemon zest, and coriander brown sugar. Five ingredients. So good.

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A favorite red fruit salad, and arguably so much better than old-school fruit salad! It’s perfect as spring rounds the bend into summer. A simple, seasonal fruit salad made with plump strawberries, sweet cherries, lemon zest, and coriander brown sugar. Five ingredients. So good.

Simple Red Fruit Salad with Strawberries, Cherries, Lemon, and Brown Sugar

And when I say simple, I’m not kidding. For a bit of something special, I ground a bit of brown sugar with coriander seeds to add to the fruit, liking the way the coriander’s citrusy, green notes played off the flavor of the strawberries and cherries. Just a little tweak, but enough to bring a hint of unexpectedness to a bowl of radiant, seasonal fruit. If you’re stuck on traditional fruit salad, consider making the jump to a red fruit salad!

Simple Red Fruit Salad with Strawberries, Cherries, Lemon, and Brown SugarFruit Salad

I first started making this fruit salad in the early days of the QUITOKEETO project, when a lot of it was happening at the house. Laugh/ cry. Friends would stop by and just shake their heads. The towers of boxes, the tape guns, the bins of items we’d sourced – it was all a bit much. We did many shipments from the dining room and kitchen island, and I thought you might like a look at the process. But, in the midst of it all, we would always try to break for a quick lunch.  This ruby-hued beauty came out of one of those lunches.

Simple Red Fruit Salad with Strawberries, Cherries, Lemon, and Brown SugarSimple Red Fruit Salad with Strawberries, Cherries, Lemon, and Brown SugarSimple Red Fruit Salad with Strawberries, Cherries, Lemon, and Brown Sugar

More Summer Fruit Recipes More Strawberry Recipes

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50+ Vegetarian Dinner Recipes
Uncategorized

A go-to collection of vegetarian dinners for every kind of night. Don’t skip the quinoa patties, they’ve been a favorite for over twenty years.

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Reflecting on decades of recipes, this is the page to bookmark if you’re looking for a deep collection of vegetarian dinner ideas. I’ve gathered everything from quick weeknight meals and high-protein faves, to fresh, seasonal dishes alongside a few cozy standbys. If you’re in the mood to browse and find something inspiring to cook, you’re in the right place.

Jump to:

Quick & Easy Weeknight Meals (20–30 minutes)

When you’re short on time and hungry, start here. These are the weeknight recipes I rely on – quick pastas, simple curries, and protein-forward meals that come together in under 30 minutes. Flexible and approachable homemade meals you can pull together without much fuss.

  1. Baked Quinoa Patties

    Great served hot or room-temperature, these quinoa patties are packed with herbs, kale and creamy feta cheese. Adult and kid-friendly, and perfect for lunches on the go. I love to keep the patties frozen – pop on a baking sheet and bake for the lowest lift type of meal.
    Baked Quinoa Patties

  2. Spicy Chickpea Pasta Bowls

    A colorful pasta bowl bonanza featuring a glossy, smooth chickpea harissa sauce and loads of crunchy cucumbers, cashews and fried onions. The definition of a vibrant, exciting one-bowl meal!
    Spicy Chickpea Pasta Bowls

  3. Chickpea Salad Sandwich

    The chickpea salad sandwich filling to make in bulk for easy lunches and snacks all week. A perfect vegetarian or vegan sandwich option.
    Chickpea Salad Sandwich

  4. Cashew Curry

    A simple, weeknight cashew curry recipe. Curry powder in coconut milk, deeply toasted cashew nuts, a handful of green beans, two handfuls of tiny cauliflower florets, and a bit of tofu for good measure makes it all good. Substitute whatever season vegetables you have on hand.
    Cashew Curry

  5. Caramelized Tofu

    One of my favorite tofu recipes, caramelized strips of tofu served over sautéed shredded brussels sprouts. It comes together quickly and uses just one pan.
    Caramelized Tofu

  6. Penne alla Vodka

    This penne alla vodka uses both whole tomatoes and tomato paste along with a splash of cream to make a vodka sauce with plenty of depth. The defining detail in this recipe is adding the zest of a lemon to the vodka. It lends a fragrant brightness to the whole preparation, making this family favorite extra special.
    Penne alla Vodka

  7. Mushroom Scallion Toasts

    A substantial, delicious, mushroom sheet pan sandwich recipe. You roast a bunch of mushrooms and scallions in a hot oven, whip up a simple poblano yogurt while those are roasting. So good!

    Mushroom Scallion Tartine with Poblano Yogurt

  8. Pasta with Etruscan Sauce

    From the Pasta Grannies series, this is a simple pasta with a special sauce made from a quick puree of sun-dried tomatoes, black olives, parsley, and garlic. It’s fast, strong, adaptable, and doesn’t disappoint.
    Pasta with Etruscan Sauce

  9. Iced Sesame Noodles

    Iced sesame noodles have become a thing in our house in recent years. Cold noodles plus a creamy sesame sauce and a line up of great toppings equals custom bowls everyone loves!
    Iced Sesame Noodles

  10. Curried Tomato Tortellini Soup

    A crowd-pleasing tomato-based tortellini soup, dotted with plump, tender dumplings, spiked with a range of spices, and boosted with plenty of spinach.

    Curried Tomato Tortellini Soup

  11. Orange Pan-glazed Tempeh

    A simple ginger and garlic-spiked orange glaze that plays of the nutty earthiness of the pan-fried tempeh beautifully. Pair it with a favorite vegetable over your favorite rice or noodles, delicious.

    Orange Pan-glazed Tempeh

High-Protein Dinners (Tofu, Tempeh, Beans & More)
 

The quest for good high-protein vegetarian dinners is real. These recipes are built around eggs, beans, lentils, tempeh, and tofu, often paired with plenty of seasonal vegetables. A good place to start if you want something a bit more substantial – meals that anchor dinner with more protein without much overthinking.

  1. Spicy Tempeh Crumble Bowl

    A riff on one of my favorite recipes in Andrea Nguyen’s Vietnamese Food Any Day – a caramelized tempeh crumble. The sort of thing that immediately becomes the best component in your rice bowl.
    Spicy Tempeh Crumble Bowl

  2. Health Nut Vegan Chili

    A special, triple-bean, vegan chili inspired by Jess Damuck’s new cookbook. It’s bold, flavor-packed and uses a technique to achieve the best texture of any chili I’ve eaten. It’s time to schedule a big chili night.
    Health Nut Vegan Chili

  3. Tofu Scramble

    This tofu scramble is fast, flavorful, and a wonderful egg-free savory breakfast. Made with spinach, curry powder, nutritional yeast, garlic, and onions, this is the version we’ve been making for years!
    Tofu Scramble

  4. Cottage Cheese Wraps

    Cottage cheese wraps are a great foundation recipe! They’re high in protein, wildly versatile, and super satisfying, You can stuff them with a wide range of fillings, drizzles, and spreads depending on the season. Here are all my tips and tricks and favorite ways to enjoy them.
    Cottage Cheese Wraps

  5. Salt and Pepper Tofu

    A special ingredient in the coating of this salt and pepper tofu is what makes it extra good. You’re going to want to have it over cold noodles, salads, or as a straight-up snack.
    Salt and Pepper Tofu

  6. Coconut Red Lentil Soup

    A vibrant red lentil soup (or stew) that is always hugely popular. A friend turned me onto this Ayurvedic dal recipe from the Esalen Cookbook years ago. Red lentil based, curry-spiced coconut broth with back notes of ginger and tomato, with slivered green onions, and a finish of cilantro or kale.
    Coconut Red Lentil Soup (Esalen Ayurvedic Dal)

  7. Grilled Veggie Tofu Kebabs

    Spicy grilled veggie kebabs made with a flavor-packed yogurt marinade and mix of vegetables with paneer cheese. A favorite that you can make ahead, and grill or bake year-round.
    Grilled Veggie Kebabs

  8. Grillable Tofu Burgers

    Seasoned with a good amount of cumin, cayenne and mustard, these are hearty, filling, easy to make, dump-everything-in-the-food processor grillable tofu burgers.
    Grillable Tofu Burgers

  9. Tempeh Curry

    A vibrant tempeh curry recipe loosely inspired by a recipe from Lora Zarubin’s cookbook, I am Almost Always Hungry.
    Tempeh Curry

  10. Golden-crusted Sesame Seeded Tofu

    In the April 1998 issue of Martha Stewart Living magazine there was a recipe for Sesame Asparagus and Tofu. I ripped it out, and cooked it a hundred times in the twenty years since.

    Golden-crusted Sesame Seeded Tofu

  11. Sheet Pan Frittata

    You don’t need much to make a good sheet pan frittata. This one starts with a dusting of lemon zest across a sheet pan, and uses a simple egg, cream, salt and pepper base.
    Sheet Pan Frittata

  12. Baked Cabbage Sliders

    Crisp on the edges and packed with beans, quinoa, cabbage, cottage cheese and other good stuff on the inside, these make for an easy, protein-packed meal everyone can personalize with toppings.
    Baked Cabbage Sliders

  13. White Bean Soup with Garlic and Olive Oil

    This white bean soup is rustic, silky, and built around plump beans simmered in a saffron-tinted broth. A squeeze of citrus, crumbled feta, and chopped olives makes each bite special.
    White Bean Soup with Garlic and Olive Oil

  14. Lentils folded into Yogurt, Spinach, and Basil

    Have you seen the little book, Lunch at the Shop: The Art and Practice of the Midday Meal? It’s great on many fronts, and these lentil-topped open-faced sandwiches are the recipe I make from it. Great for a quick meal, especially if you keep lentils on hand.

    Lentils folded into Yogurt, Spinach, and Basil

Fresh & Seasonal
 

For the vegetable lovers, these are meals where produce takes the lead. Built around what’s fresh and in season, and designed to make the most of what looks good at the market. Flexible enough to shift with the seasons (and weather), from summer tomatoes to winter greens.

  1. How to Make a Great Vegetarian Poke Bowl

    Let’s make a vegetarian poke bowl! They’re fantastic this time of year because they’re light, clean, filling but not heavy. Made with watermelon poke.
    How to Make a Great Vegetarian Poke Bowl

  2. Spicy Summer Miso Soup

    A show-stopper miso soup made with a spicy broth punched up with garlic, ginger and chile paste. To that you add cubed potatoes, chopped cabbage and summer produce like cherry tomatoes, basil, and corn.
    Spicy Summer Miso Soup

  3. Double Broccoli Quinoa

    For the broccoli lovers out there (or anyone who strives to be), this is your recipe. Cook up lots of broccoli, and puree half of it into a pesto. The other half is cut into little florets. Toss the broccoli with some quinoa, sliced avocado and a drizzle of feisty chile pepper oil.
    Double Broccoli Quinoa

  4. Pasta with Smashed Zucchini Cream

    If you have an endless supply of zucchini right now, this is your recipe. A simple, garlic-boosted pasta, it uses two pounds of zucchini, and is endlessly adaptable.
    Pasta with Smashed Zucchini Cream

  5. Grilled Zucchini & Bread Salad

    If you need to put a 2 pound dent in your zucchini supply right now, give this a go. A bread salad made with torn pieces of toasted multi-grain bread, grilled zucchini, chickpeas, and a simple, garlic-forward ponzu dressing.
    Grilled Zucchini & Bread Salad

  6. Black Sesame Otsu Soba Bowl

    The Black Sesame Otsu recipe from my Super Natural Every Day cookbook – soba noodles and tofu slathered in a thinned-out, salty-sweet black sesame paste, then topped with lots of sliced green onions. So good!
    Black Sesame Otsu

  7. Cauliflower Caponata

    This deeply flavorful caponata recipe cleverly trades out traditional eggplant for roasted cauliflower and uses an oven in place of deep-frying. The idea comes from Easy Wins by Anna Jones and has become an absolute favorite.
    Cauliflower Caponata

  8. Niçoise Salad 

    Everyone can find ingredients to love In this vegetarian take on Niçoise Salad! Beans and artichokes take the place of tuna (or anchovies) here alongside tender potatoes, hard-boiled eggs, cherry tomatoes, and green beans.
    Niçoise Salad 

  9. Sweet Potato Tacos

    These sweet potato tacos are so simple, and so good! Tortillas are slathered with smashed, roasted sweet potatoes. Top with black beans, sliced avocado, quick pickled red onions, a bit of cheese, and squeeze of lime. Fantastic.
    Sweet Potato Tacos

One-Pan & One-Pot Meals
 

For the nights you can’t stand to face a sink filled with dishes. These are the meals that keep the chaos contained.

  1. Pan-Fried Beans with Kale

    Golden crusted pan-fried beans are made extra special by loading them up with kale, Parmesan, lemon, walnuts, and nutmeg. So many great variations in the comments as well!
    Pan-Fried Beans with Kale

  2. Asparagus Stir-Fry

    A favorite stir-fry recipe. Asparagus and tofu form the base, but it has quite a lot going on beyond that. You get a bite of tang from the lime, heat from the red chiles and fresh ginger, mint and basil cool things down. A touch of hoisin sauce gives you just enough sweetness to balance it all out.
    Asparagus Stir-Fry

  3. Harissa Spaghetti

    A unique and flavor-packed spaghetti recipe. Whole wheat pasta noodles, olives, kale, and toasted nuts are tossed in a pan for a tangle with a garlic-charged harissa and olive oil sauce. This one is an easy weeknight win!
    Harissa Spaghetti

  4. Meal In a Jar: Spicy Coconut Curry Noodles

    Just add water and a splash of coconut milk to make this fragrant curry noodle pot. A dynamic and feisty broth is bolstered with cayenne, ginger, cinnamon, and turmeric enveloping egg noodles and whatever seasonal vegetables you have on hand.
    Meal In a Jar: Spicy Coconut Curry Noodles

  5. Garganelli with Kale and Lentils

    This one-pot, garganelli pasta is an easy weeknight win. It’s pasta and lentils simmered in crushed tomatoes and finished with lots of chopped kale, saffron, swirls of tahini and chopped almonds.
    Garganelli with Kale and Lentils

  6. Garlic Lime Lettuce Wraps

    Ginger and garlic tempeh rice, folded into lime-spiked lettuce wraps with lots of herbs, cucumber, and carrots. A one-pan meal that comes together in no time!

    Garlic Lime Lettuce Wraps

  7. One-Pot Indian-Spiced Rice with Cauliflower and Tofu

    A true one-pot meal, this Indian-spiced rice is made with store-bought spicy simmer sauce, paired with tofu and cauliflower. It’s hearty, filling and you can load it up with a range of herbs or crunchy nuts as toppings.
    One-Pot Indian-Spiced Rice with Cauliflower and Tofu

Cozy & Comforting
 

Perhaps my favorite category, these are hearty, satisfying, flavor-packed meals, the kind you want to settle in with, preferably in a cozy sweater and cashmere socks.

  1. Baked Ziti

    This baked ziti uses ricotta, mozzarella, and creme fraîche to make a bubbly, rich pasta with a hearty, spinach-flecked red sauce loaded with flavor. The creme fraîche keeps things silky, adds dimension, and is a game changer. A family favorite that freezes well and happily feeds a crowd.
    Baked Ziti

  2. Rustic Cabbage Soup

    Hearty, healthy, and satisfying – this cabbage soup recipe is super simple to make. Slice a cabbage into thin ribbons and cook it down in a simple pot of sautéed potatoes, onions, beans, garlic and flavorful broth. Finish each bowl with a generous drizzle of great olive oil, a couple dollops of sour cream and a jolt of something spicy.
    Rustic Cabbage Soup

  3. Giant Chipotle Baked Beans

    A riff on Laurence Jossel’s famous NOPA beans – plump, creamy beans baked in a bright, chunky chipotle tomato sauce, topped with crunchy breadcrumbs, plenty of oozy queso fresco, and an emerald drizzle of cilantro pesto.
    Giant Chipotle Baked Beans

  4. Vegan Red Pozole

    This favorite meatless red pozole is grounded with cascabel and chipotle chiles and spiked with citrus olive oil. It’s so incredibly delicious.
    Vegan Red Pozole (Pozole Rojo / Mexican Hominy Stew)

  5. Three Cheese Pizza Beans

    Inspired by the internet-famous Smitten Kitchen Pizza Beans highlighted in Rancho Gordo’s new book, this wintery version has all the much-loved components – tomato, melty cheeses, and giant beans – along with pumpkin, feta, black olives and kale. A favorite one-pan make and bake meal.
    Three Cheese Pizza Beans

  6. Peanut Soup (with Spinach and Miso)

    This spicy peanut soup is the definition of a crowd-pleaser. Meaning, it’s hearty and delicious and it works for a wide range of people with a range of dietary preferences – gluten free, vegetarian, vegan, dairy-free. If you’re hosting a soup night, this is your move.
    Peanut Soup (with Spinach and Miso)

  7. Saag Paneer

    This is how I like to cook saag paneer – chopped spinach, golden-crusted paneer cheese, assertively spices, and finished with toasted sesame seeds and fresh lemon juice.
    A Really Good Saag Paneer

  8. Pasta with Creamy Crushed Walnut Sauce

    Toasted walnuts pounded with garlic into a creamy sauce make this pasta easy and exceptional. If you have dried pasta, a few cloves of garlic, walnuts, and black pepper you can make this. The other ingredients – lemon zest, a bit of grated cheese, a finishing cascade of breadcrumbs and herbs are encouraged, but not essential.
    Pasta with Creamy Crushed Walnut Sauce

  9. Spicy Tahini Noodles with Roasted Vegetables

    This is my favorite kind of weeknight meal. Noodles tossed with a quick sauce, topped with an abundance of vegetables, and kissed with chile feistiness courtesy of the condiment shelf.

    Spicy Tahini Noodles with Roasted Vegetables

Weekend Cooking
 

For when you are have a little more time to spend in the kitchen, when going long-form is a feature not a bug. Fresh pastas and meals with a few components, the kind that invite you to slow down a bit and enjoy the process as much as the payoff.

  1. Homemade Pappardelle

    Simple, homemade pappardelle pasta is a deliciously versatile shape to make! Pictured below topped with crispy mushrooms, clouds of Parmesan cheese, and lemon.
    Homemade Pappardelle

  2. Ultimate Veggie Burger

    The ultimate veggie burger recipe made with a secret trick, garbanzo beans, cilantro, onions, lemon zest, eggs, and bread crumbs.

    Ultimate Veggie Burger

  3. Homemade Tagliatelle

    Homemade tagliatelle pasta is long, slender, flat, and a much-loved pasta shape. For good reason! It works with a range of sauces and if you have flour, eggs, olive oil, and salt you can make it immediately.
    Homemade Tagliatelle

  4. Vegan Fish Tacos

    The vegan “fish” tacos to make on repeat. Quick-marinated slabs of golden-crusted tofu, avocado slathered tortillas, and a spicy sesame slaw come together in these favorite tacos.
    Vegan Fish Tacos

  5. Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta

    Pici is one of the most charming pasta shapes. It is a quirky favorite requiring a short list of simple ingredients hand-rolled into long, slightly irregular strands. Pici love forever.
    Hand-Rolled Pici Pasta

  6. Best Easy Pizza Dough

    This pizza dough recipe sets the foundation for beautiful, flavorful pizzas. It works great in home ovens as well as outdoor pizza ovens. No mixer is needed and you don’t need to proof your yeast.
    Best Easy Pizza Dough

  7. Thousand Layer Lasagna

    My favorite and best lasagna recipe. Dozens and dozens of whisper-thin sheets of fresh pasta brushed with the most vibrant red tomato sauce imaginable all intersecting layer after layer of warm, oozy, fresh mozzarella.
    Thousand Layer Lasagna

  8. Mushroom Lasagna

    This freezer-friendly mushroom lasagna is all about homemade mushroom ragù, big dollops of ricotta cheese, and silky tender sheets of pasta finished with a bit of basil and some grated Parmesan cheese.
    Mushroom Lasagna

 

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Classic Risotto
100+ Vegetarian RecipesBasic TechniquesDinner IdeasGluten Free RecipesHeidi's FavoritesMain Course RecipesSide Dish Recipes

Creamy, textured, and just loose enough to ripple across the plate - this is the classic risotto you’re aiming for. Here’s how you get there, step by step.

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This is the first risotto you should learn to make. Simple enough to focus on technique, and delicious enough to return to over and over. The two hero ingredients are rice and Parmesan cheese, and the rest of the story is largely about method and approach. Pay attention to a few key details – pan shape, good rice – and you’ll be rewarded with a creamy, tender risotto every time.
Risotto in a wide saucepan

How To Make Risotto

Taking our lead from what Marcella Hazan tells us in The Classic Italian Cookbook, “…in making risotto, the objective is to cause rice to absorb, a little at a time, enough hot broth until it swells and forms a creamy union of tender, yet firm grains.”

In broader terms, these are the basic steps. Once you get your timing and flow down, you can adapt the process to a wide range of seasonal risottos. But it’s worth nailing down the fundamentals first.

  1. Start with great ingredients and equipment: Choose a high-quality risotto rice, and a wide, heavy-bottomed pan.
    ingredients for making risotto including rice, onion, wine
  2. Build the base: Sauté finely chopped onion or shallot in oil or butter until soft.
    cooking onions in olive oil for risotto
  3. Toast the rice: Add the rice and stir until well-coated and slightly translucent at the edges.
    gradually adding liquids to saucepan
  4. Add liquid gradually: Increase the heat and begin adding hot liquid (salted water or broth) a splash at a time. Allow each addition to absorb before adding more. Different rices absorb different amounts at different speeds, you’ll need to adjust accordingly. It’s about vibes at this stage.
    finished risotto in a pan on counter
  5. Finish strong: Continue until rice is tender and creamy with a bit of a bite, then finish with olive oil and Parmesan, I like some chives as well (above). Your goal is a creamy, flowing risotto with tender distinct grains.
box of vialone nano risotto rice
Best Rice For Risotto

I bought a box of Campanini Vialone Nano risotto rice a couple of years back, and it was a game changer. Risotto perfection, the kind you dream of. Before that, I made plenty of risotto-style dishes using pearled barley and farro, and endless batches with arborio and carnaroli rice. But the Vialone Nano was a record scratch for me. It snapped me right back to classic risotto territory – one of those “why mess with perfection?” moments. Now I make a classic risotto like this one about once a month.

That said, you can absolutely make great risotto with arborio, and carnaroli is excellent as well. But keep an eye out for other risotto rices – especially the Vialone Nano pictured above –  because one of them might end up being your a-ha rice.

Common risotto rices: (each absorbs liquid differently)

  • Arborio – widely available, solid choice, short and pearly, creamy
  • Carnaroli: holds shape well, larger longer grain than Arborio, a little more dense
  • Vialone Nano: my favorite, incredible texture, highly absorbent, creamy dreamy, thirsty
Equipment for Risotto

If you love risotto, and if you’re serious about making it part of your cooking rhythm, finding the right pan is half the battle. When my dad died I took his dark green, shallow Le Creuset braiser, and it quickly became my favorite risotto pot. It’s deep enough, expansively wide, and heavy – a triple win.

  • The pan: A good risotto pan should be wide rather than narrow, thick rather than thin, and deep – but not so deep it makes regular stirring awkward.
    favorite wide risotto pan
  • Wooden spoon: Skip the floppy spatulas and silicone, this is a job for an old-school wooden spoon. The structure of a wooden spoon lets you scrape the bottom of the pan and free any rice that sticks as you cook.

Risotto in a wide saucepan

Do You Have to Stir Risotto Constantly?

I know you want me to tell you that you don’t need to stir risotto continuously, but here’s why you should. If you’re making great risotto, you’re cooking it over a lively burner, with enough heat to keep things bubbling. This means the rice on the bottom of your wide pan is going to stick pretty quickly. A big part of stirring is scraping the bottom of the pan, freeing up any grains that are starting to catch. So yes, when I’m cooking risotto, I’m right there at the stove with a wooden spoon the entire time.

Risotto: Variations
  • Meyer Lemon Risotto: Inspired by a version in the Via Carota cookbook, I love this winter citrus variation. Warm three basil leaves with the oil at the beginning of the recipe below – discard them before adding shallots/onion. Finish the risotto with the zest and juice of two Meyer lemons. To make it extra special, use a Y-shaped vegetable peeler to peel the lemons (no white pith please!), then use a sharp know to slice the peels razor thin. Making hand cut zest (versus microplane grater) is arguably worth the extra effort.
  • Citrus Risotto: A mixed citrus risotto is also great. I like orange zest and juice combined with equal parts lemon zest/juice. Or some grapefruit juice.
  • Spring Risotto: We enjoyed this the other day – classic risotto topped with fava beans, a spoon-fried egg and lots of snipped chives. Pictured below.
    risotto variation served topped with fava beans and a poached egg
  • Mushroom Risotto: Use mushroom broth in place of the salted water. Serve topped with a double batch of these baked mushrooms. A dollop of creme fraiche brings it all home.
Risotto in a wide saucepan
What To Do With Leftover Risotto
  • Baked Arancini: I like to make a baked version of arancini (typically fried). Form small balls, the size of a walnut shell using wet hands. Coat with beaten egg and roll in breadcrumbs, bake at 375F until golden on the outsides.
  • Risotto Cakes: Form cold risotto into firm patties about 3/4-inch thick using wet hands. Pan-fry in a generous amount of olive oil until deeply golden. If you’re worried about the rice patties being too delicate, mix in 1 egg for every two cups of leftover risotto. Shape, and pan fry in olive oil. Starting with cold risotto is key.
More Italian Recipes More Rice Recipes

For more ideas, explore my collection of rice recipes. Some faves include: 

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Homemade Pesto
100+ Vegetarian RecipesBasic TechniquesHeidi's FavoritesSummer edit

A vibrant homemade pesto recipe taught to me by my friend Francesca's mother who came to visit from Genoa, Italy. This is how to make pesto like an Italian grandmother. Made with hand-chopped basil, garlic, Parmesan, olive oil and pine nuts. The real deal.

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This is my favorite way to make homemade pesto, and if you’ve ever tasted pesto in Italy you know pesto here in the United States isn’t the same. I received a lesson in how to make pesto from a real Italian grandmother and now understand the difference. It’s the details that make this pesto recipe so special.
How to Make Pesto like an Italian Grandmother

Homemade Pesto: The Inspiration

My friend Francesca makes the trip from her small town near the pesto-epicenter of Genoa, Italy to San Francisco once or twice a year – this time (lucky for us) she brought her mom and two-year old son Mattia. Her mom makes a beautiful pesto (and perfectly light, potato gnocchi to go along with it) and offered to show me (and my friend Jen) how it is done. It was a complete game-changer. If you love pesto, you really have to try this. Her technique results in an incredibly special version.
A lot of Chopped Basil is the First Step to Pesto

How To Make Pesto

The method can be summed up simply:

  • Chop your ingredients by hand, adding basil, garlic, Parmesan cheese and pine nuts in stages.
  • Bring it together with a bit of olive oil.

Here’s why. Most of the pesto you encounter here in the U.S. is different for a few reasons. First off, much of it is made by machine, usually a food processor or hand blender. The cook will pulse the ingredients into a paste. This holds true even if it is homemade. Don’t get me wrong, it usually tastes good, but because the ingredients aren’t hand chopped you end up with a texture that is more like like a moist, uniform paste with little to no definition between ingredients. You also might see pesto made with a mortar and pestle. This pesto is something different.

During my lesson I quickly began to realize chopping all the ingredients by hand is key because this prevents the ingredients from becoming a completely homogenized emulsion or paste. When you dress a pasta with a pesto that has been hand chopped the minuscule flecks of basil will separate from the olive oil, pine nuts, and Parmesan cheese in places. You get definition between ingredients, and bright flavors pop in a way they don’t when they’ve been blended into one.
Fresh Basil Leaves before Being Chopped into Pesto

Video: How to Make Pesto



Choosing The Best Basil for Making Pesto

Genovese pesto is famous in part because it is often made with young, small fresh basil leaves. For us non-Italians it is easy to find Genovese basil in stores and at farmer’s markets, particularly in the summer. That said, chances are it wasn’t picked young. I wouldn’t worry about it too much, simply by hand chopping all your ingredients, you will see a major shift in personality of your pesto.
Close Up Photo of Pesto before Adding Olive Oil

Hand-Chopped vs Food Processor?

Per the above, this pesto celebrates hand-chopping. Correspondingly, if you’re serious about making good pesto using the hand-chop technique you’ll need a sharp (preferably large, single blade) mezzaluna, or a good knife. The sharpness of your blade absolutely matters because you don’t want to bruise or tear your basil. Whatever you use to chop, make sure it has a sharp blade or the basil will turn dark. Chopping the ingredients will take twenty minutes or so. Once you chop your ingredients, you’ll form them into a cake, pictured above. You add olive oil to this cake, and it’s magic. That said, not everyone has the time or patience to hand chop – let’s talk about it.
Pesto Made with a Food Processor or blender

How to Make Pesto with a Blender or Food Processor

We don’t always have time to hand chop, I get it! If you want to make pesto using a blender or food processor here’s how. Pulse the garlic and pine nuts into a chunky paste. Use the quantities in the recipe below. Add the basil and pulse into a bright green paste. Pulse in the olive oil, adding more if you want a thinner texture. Stir in the grated cheese by hand and season with a bit of salt if needed. Some days, are going to be blender pesto days! 

How to Make Pesto like an Italian Grandmother - Finished Pesto in A Jar

How to Use Pesto

What do you eat pesto with? There are so many great ways to use pesto – some traditional, many not.

  • On pizza: I love a thick slather as the base sauce on a good pizza (this page actually has an extended list of pizza topping ideas).
  • Pasta: Good pasta paired with homemade pesto is a classic duo for a reason. Same goes for pesto and gnocchi. Start with simple homemade pasta, and branch out to other shapes over time – pici and cavatelli are favorites.
  • On savory tarts: A slather of pesto on a tart shell before adding the rest of ingredients is a favorite pro-tip. I do it often on this quiche, and on tomato tarts.
  • Bruschetta: If you have a slab of sourdough coming off the grill, a bit of pesto, some seasonal roasted veggies, and a dusting of cheese makes an easy meal. Something along the lines of these bruschetta.
  • Instant flavor: And because pesto lends a bolt of flavor, I love to whisk a dollop into scrambled eggs, omelettes, mashed potatoes, and baked potatoes. It’s great swirled into grain bowls or spooned over roasted vegetables as well. 
Pesto FAQ

Generally speaking, store any pesto you might use in the next day or two, refrigerated, under a thin film of olive oil. You can also freeze it in snack-sized baggies. Thaw and toss with whatever gnocchi, ravioli, or other favorite pasta you like – and a good splash of pasta water!

  • How Do I Keep Pesto from Turning Brown? There are a couple ways to keep your pesto bright green. Browning comes from oxidizing. One way to prevent this is to limit exposure to air. Because of this, I like to keep pesto in my narrowest jar with a thin layer of olive oil on top so that no pesto is exposed to air. The other option is to blanch your basil leaves briefly, and proceed with your pesto-making from there. I almost always opt for option one.
  • Can Pesto Be Frozen? Yes! You can absolutely freeze pesto. Any pesto you won’t use within a couple days, transfer to freezer baggies. Freeze flat, and break off chunks of pesto to use whenever you need it. When you need larger quantities defrost the entire bag either in the refrigerator or on your countertop.
  • How do I store basil? here are a number of great ways to keep basil fresh until you’re ready to use it. If you think you’ll use it within a day or two, keep the basil in a jar of water on your countertop. The way you’d keep a bouquet of flowers. If you think it will be a few days beyond that, treat the basil like you would salad greens. Give the basil a gentle wash, then wrap the leaves in a clean kitchen towel or paper towels, place this in a baggie, and refrigerate until ready to use.
Pesto Variations

Don’t limit yourself to basil pesto. You can absolutely experiment with a blend of other herbs as well. You can add anything from parsley to marjoram (a favorite!), mint to fresh oregano to your basil base. Or leave the basil out entirely! I like to add citrus zest on occasion, or switch up the type of nuts I use – toasted almonds and walnuts are favorites.

  • Arugula pesto: swap out all the basil for arugula.
  • Vegan pesto: use a hard vegan cheese in place of the Parmesan
  • Herb pesto: here’s a five herb pesto I make on occasion. You can chop it by hand or use a food processor.
  • Broccoli pesto: This broccoli quinoa recipe uses a broccoli pesto of sorts.
More Pasta Recipes Favorite Pasta Sauces Other Favorite Italian Recipes

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Chickpea Recipes
100+ Vegetarian RecipesHigh Protein Recipes

Everyone loves chickpeas. They’re one of the most charming and versatile ingredients in the kitchen. At home in soups, spreads, bowls, and snacks, they always deliver. This is a collection of tried-and-true chickpea recipes for all of it.

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Chickpeas are the ultimate pantry ingredient. A real culinary workhorse. They’re filling, protein-rich, and a quick way to bulk out salads, bowls, and stews. They’re just as great roasted until crisp or blended into a creamy smooth dip or sandwich spread. These are the chickpea recipes I come back to.

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Crispy Chickpeas & Small Plates

Pop in your mouth, snacky chickpea recipes that are easy to pull together.

  1. Crispy Chickpeas

    Crispy roasted chickpeas are one of my favorite ways to add crunch and a bit of protein to salads, bowls, and roasted vegetables. There are a few tricks to getting…
    Crispy Chickpeas

  2. Turmeric Chickpeas

    Turmeric chickpeas, you can use them in all sorts of things! This includes your favorite hummus, salads, and other chickpea creations.
    Turmeric Chickpeas

Chickpea Salads & Sandwiches  

Chickpeas level up just about any salad or sandwich they’re added to.

  1. Asparagus Ribbon Salad with Crispy Chickpeas and Hot Honey

    Shaving asparagus into ribbons turns it into something completely different — delicate, tender, and perfect for a big spring salad.
    Asparagus Ribbon Salad with Crispy Chickpeas and Hot Honey

  2. Chickpea Salad Sandwich

    The chickpea salad sandwich filling to make in bulk for easy lunches and snacks all week. A perfect vegetarian or vegan sandwich option.
    Chickpea Salad Sandwich

  3. Bar Tartine Cauliflower Salad (with Chickpeas)

    A beautiful cauliflower salad from the Bar Tartine cookbook – a crunchy, hearty mixture of cauliflower, seeds, chiles, radishes, chickpeas, and green onions slathered in an enveloping garlicky yogurt dressing.
    Bar Tartine Cauliflower Salad with Chickpeas

  4. Quinoa Salad (with Chickpeas)

    A favorite quinoa salad punctuated with crunchy cucumbers and toasted cashews. There’s creamy feta, wisps of arugula, flecks of red onion and herbs, and a special ginger-curry dressing. So delicious!
    Quinoa Salad with Chickpeas

  5. An Ideal Lunch Salad (with Chickpeas)

    There’s all sorts of good stuff in this salad – chickpeas, celery, black olives, pepitas, avocado, blanched broccoli. Full of crunch & substance.
    An Ideal Lunch Salad with Chickpeas

  6. Moroccan Carrot and Chickpea Salad

    A beauty of a carrot salad – tricked out with chickpeas, chunks of dried pluots, sliced almonds, and a toasted cumin dressing. Thank you Diane Morgan.
    Moroccan Carrot and Chickpea Salad

Chickpea Bowls & Skillet Meals  

Chickpeas are a great foundation ingredient, especially for skillet meals and bowls where they play a major role.

  1. Turmeric Chickpeas with Garlic Tahini

    A quick lunch. And a compelling reason to always keep turmeric chickpeas on hand!
    Turmeric Chickpeas with Garlic Tahini

  2. Ultimate Veggie Burger (with Chickpeas)

    The ultimate veggie burger recipe made with a secret trick, garbanzo beans, cilantro, onions, lemon zest, eggs, and bread crumbs.
    Ultimate Veggie Burger with Chickpeas

  3. Lemony Chickpea Stir-fry

    A tasty, quick, and easy stir-fry recipe featuring golden crusted, pan-fried chickpeas, chopped kale, summer squash, tofu, and a bit of lemon zest.
    Lemony Chickpea Stir-fry

  4. A Really Good Chana Masala

    There are a lot of chana masala recipes out there that are perfectly good, but this is the chana masala you should make tonight – a Technicolor version of chana masala.
    A Really Good Chana Masala

  5. Green Falafel Bowl

    The star of this show is the golden-crusted, green spinach falafel. Lemon-flecked, made with chickpeas, you see them tucked into this rainbow assortment of hummus, pita, kale, cucumber, and carrots.
    Green Falafel Bowl

  6. Instant Pot Chickpea Cauliflower Korma

    An Insta-friendly riff on the Chickpea Cauliflower Korma recipe in Jennifer Iserloh’s The Healing Slow Cooker – chickpeas, cauliflower, combined with a not-shy simmer sauce.
    Instant Pot Chickpea Cauliflower Korma

  7. Rice Pilaf (with Chickpeas)

    An all-star, homemade rice pilaf focused on building flavor throughout the cooking process. This one is made with butter, basmati, toasted nuts, caramelized onions and fragrant spices. One pot.
    Rice Pilaf with Chickpeas

  8. Pan-fried Chickpea Salad

    A salad made by pan-frying chickpeas with leeks and a bit of garlic. The creamy dressing is made with plain yogurt and curry powder, and the salad is finished off with plenty of chopped cilantro and chopped red onion.
    Pan-fried Chickpea Salad

Chickpea Soups & Stews  

Good things happen when chickpeas are added to a hearty soup or stew – adding body, texture, and staying power.

  1. Chickpea & Rice Soup with Garlic Chile Oil

    A simple, chunky rice soup, studded with lots of chickpeas, flecked with kale, and drizzled with a vibrant garlic-chile oil. It has peanuts. It has a dusting of turmeric.
    Chickpea & Rice Soup with Garlic Chile Oil

  2. Spicy Chickpea and Bulgur Soup

    Inspired by a Yotam Ottolenghi recipe in Plenty More a seductive, red harissa broth fragrant with cumin, coriander, and caraway, and enough chickpeas and bulgur to make it work as a main course. An herb-whipped feta is the crowning dollop.
    Spicy Chickpea and Bulgur Soup

  3. Persian New Year Noodle Soup (Ash Reshteh)

    An amazing Persian New Year Noodle Soup (Ash Reshteh) inspired by a version in Greg & Lucy Malouf’s beautiful book, Saraban. At its core, this is a celebratory chickpea, bean and noodle soup featuring thin egg noodles swimming in a fragrant broth spiced with turmeric, cumin, chiles, and black pepper. Loaded with spinach and herbs, you serve it topped with walnuts, caramelized onions, and a dollop of something creamy. It’s a stunner.
    Persian New Year Noodle Soup (Ash Reshteh)

  4. Roasted Tomato & Sourdough Soup (with Chickpeas)

    If you have both tomatoes and sourdough on hand, consider this. A spicy, saffron-smacked take on pappa al pomodoro, the bread-thickened Tuscan classic.
    Roasted Tomato & Sourdough Soup

Chickpea Pasta & Grain Dishes  

A favorite category, chickpeas find their way into a wide range of pastas, rice, and grain bowls in my kitchen. These are a few to try.

  1. Spicy Chickpea Pasta Bowls

    A colorful pasta bowl bonanza featuring a glossy, smooth chickpea harissa sauce and loads of crunchy cucumbers, cashews and fried onions. The definition of a vibrant, exciting one-bowl meal!
    Spicy Chickpea Pasta Bowls

  2. Instant Pot Herbed Chickpea Plov

    If you love robust one-pot rice dishes, and you own an Instant Pot, this recipe is for you. It has rice, and chickpeas, fragrant spices, spinach, herbs, saffron, garlic, and olives.
    Instant Pot Herbed Chickpea Plov

  3. Cherry Tomato Couscous (with Chickpeas)

    Cherry tomatoes, cucumber, chopped basil, and chickpeas tossed with couscous, olive oil and freshly squeezed lemon and lime juice. Finished with a bit of feta.
    Cherry Tomato Couscous with Chickpeas

  4. Chickpea Hot Pot

    A fast-cooking bulgur cooks in a light orange-juice accented broth. Plenty of chickpeas, tiny cauliflower pieces, onions, and greens add texture and substance to the hearty pot.
    Chickpea Hot Pot

Hummus & Chickpea Spreads  

Hummus and beyond – chickpeas blend into all sorts of dips and spreads.

  1. Golden Beet Hummus

    A lightened-up hummus – reining in the tahini and oil a bit. Billowy and smooth, it’s a boosted hummus for everyday, all-day w/ golden beets, turmeric, and chickpeas.
    Golden Beet Hummus

  2. Melissa Clark’s Instant Pot Hummus (with Variations)

    Melissa Clark’s recipe results in a silky smooth hummus. Once you nail down the method, the variations you can do are endless.
    Melissa Clark’s Instant Pot Hummus (with Variations)

  3. Hummus en Fuego

    A beautiful, spicy hummus recipe made from pureed garbanzo beans, toasted walnuts, and spicy crushed red pepper oil finished with a few chopped olives and a bit of cilantro.
    Hummus en Fuego

Chickpea Baking & More  

Chickpeas are surprisingly versatile – their cooking liquid and chickpea flour can be used in baking and other preparations. Some ideas to explore.

  1. Chickpea Chocolate Chip Cookies

    From The Miller’s Daughter cookbook, these chocolate-flecked cookies are made with chickpea flour, tahini, and brown sugar for a brilliant twist on peanut butter chocolate chip cookies. The texture is crisp at the edges and soft-centered with oozy puddles of chocolate throughout.
    Chickpea Chocolate Chip Cookies

  2. How to Make Simple Vegan Mayo

    A simple vegan mayo to use in all your favorite potato salads, macaroni salads, and coleslaw this summer. Made with the liquid from a can of chickpeas (aquafaba).
    How to Make Simple Vegan Mayo

Chickpeas are a favorite beans to cook with, they’re super approachable, affordable, a bit nutty, and delicious. If you’re looking for more ideas, explore all my bean recipes.

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Farro Salad with Olives, Walnuts and Pecorino
100+ Vegetarian RecipesSalad RecipesSide Dish RecipesWhole Grain Recipes

This quirky yet delicious farro salad tends to leave a big impression. Green olives, chives, toasted walnuts, and honey combine with a few other ingredients into bold make-ahead grain salad perfect for parties and potlucks.

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This big-flavored farro salad was my contribution to a beautiful Easter spread with friends this year. It’s a favorite farro salad variation I’ve returned to for many years, and one I included it in my Near & Far cookbook. The ingredients are quirky and unexpected – wild amounts of pitted green olives, plenty of toasted walnuts, scallions, honey, olive oil, and something sweet like yellow raisins or dates alongside semi-pearled farro. I made four times the recipe below for Sunday. Leftovers are perfection tossed with some arugula and topped with a simple fried or poached egg.
Farro Salad with Olives and Pecorino in a large serving bowl

The Ingredients: Farro Salad with Olives, Walnuts & Pecorino

A few thoughts on key ingredients.

  • Farro: After years of experimenting, I always buy semi-pearled farro for this salad. The pearling process takes away some of the outer bran layer. You end up with a chewy, nutty grain that softens nicely while still holding its structure. Farro packaging uses a range of terminology, just look for semi-pearled or pearled. I often see this type of farro in Italian groceries, in bulk bins, or in the Italian section of markets (near pastas or pasta sauces). It takes about 10-15 minutes to cook.
  • Olives: In my original headnote I noted “massive Sicilian Castelvetrano olives are my choice here, but any great-tasting green olives will do – Cerignola, Lucques, or Sevillano – preferably from an olive bar, not a can.” But I’ll be honest, I haven’t made this in years without Castelvetrano olives. They work perfectly with the farro and toasted walnuts and pair beautifully with sheep’s milk pecorino.
  • Cheese: the finishing touch here is shaved pecorino cheese. I like to buy a mild textured (semi-stagionato) one that isn’t too young or aged too long – somewhere in the middle. It should be assertive enough to stand up to the other bold flavor in play, but not overly strong or salty. And use a good amount, I basically leave that up to you. As people dig into the serving bowl it breaks up into smaller flecks and clings to the walnuts and olives.
    Farro Salad with Olives and Pecorino in a large serving bowl
  • Chopped dates or raisins: You need a sweet component in this salad, and I tend to reach for whatever I have in the kitchen. This time I went with chopped dates, but golden raisins also work well. You could play around with dried cherries, or even chopped dried apricots.
Farro Salad with Olives and Pecorino on a large table at a party
More Farro Recipes More Salad Recipes

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Chocolate Chia Pudding
260+ Vegan RecipesBreakfast RecipesChocolate RecipesDessert RecipesGluten Free RecipesQuick RecipesWhole Food Plant-Based Diet Recipes

The chocolate chia pudding of your dreams. Silky, deeply chocolatey, crunchy on top — dessert vibes with breakfast credentials.

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Chocolate chia pudding. Is it a breakfast? A snack? Dessert? Arguably all three. This chocolate chia pudding is built on a thick Greek yogurt base with plenty of powerhouse chia seeds, maple syrup to sweeten things up, and enough cacao powder that you don’t feel like you’re skimping on the chocolate. I give it a quick pass with the hand blender to smooth out the texture, then finish things with a generous layer of granola for much-loved crunch.
chocolate chia pudding in a bowl

Why I love Chocolate Chia Pudding

I love this sort of thing – a bowl of something that feels indulgent, but is actually quite nourishing. Chia seeds bring fiber and omega-3s, Greek yogurt delivers a nice amount of protein, and the cacao powder shows up with deep chocolate flavor without being overly sweet. It’s filling, make-ahead friendly, and easy to adapt.

It also works for vegans, just swap in a non-dairy yogurt and you’re all set. As a savory breakfast person, I usually like this as an afternoon snack, but it also works just as well as a dessert.

chocolate chia pudding in a bowl
Tips for Great Chocolate Chia Pudding

There are a couple things I’ve found that help here, especially if you don’t love the tapioca-like texture of puddings made with chia seeds:

  • Use a hand blender. Use a hand blender rather than a food processor. A food processor tends to chase the chia seeds around the bowl, while a hand blender smooths everything quickly and evenly. A high-speed blender works as well, but the hand blender is faster and easier to clean.
  • Fully hydrate the chia seeds. Chia seeds need time to fully plump up. Mix the chia and yogurt together, preferably the night before, then add the rest of the ingredients and give everything a quick pass with the hand blender.
  • Splurge on good cacao powder. I like to raw, natural cacao powder here. The chocolate flavor is deep, direct, and intense, and since it’s the main flavor note in the pudding it’s worth sourcing a good one.
  • Play with sweetness. Feel free to adjust the amount of maple syrup. I usually land somewhere between 2-3 tablespoons. The recipe calls for 3, but you can dial it back or swap in another natural sweetener if you like.
  • Don’t skimp on the crunch. Clusters of crunchy granola are what really make this bowl for me – they add needed contrast to the pudding vibes. If granola isn’t your thing, try toasted nuts, toasted coconut, toasted pumpkin seeds, or freeze-dried berries. This peanut butter granola is really good with here, or if you want to double down on the chocolate, try this low oil and naturally sweetened granola.
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Easter Brunch Ideas
100+ Vegetarian RecipesBaking RecipesBreakfast RecipesSpring edit

A collection of all-star Easter brunch ideas ranging from a favorite breakfast casserole recipe to the best waffle recipe I know. All worth making year-round as well!

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I know many of you are on the hunt for good Easter brunch recipes right now. Here are a few favorites. I’m highlighting them here for Easter, but they’re all a part of my year-round repertoire. For brunch I love family-style dishes like breakfast casseroles and frittatas equally as much as a waffle or omelette bar. I mean, who doesn’t love a DIY toppings situation? You’ll see a mix of all this down below along with favorite drinks and a handful of menu ideas. Have fun planning!

Easter Brunch Ideas

I limited this recipe list to long-time favorites. Real go-to options, the brunch all-stars. Be sure to browse the list of menu ideas down below if you need inspiration on that front!

Breakfast Casserole
Everything Bagel Breakfast Casserole: A top contender for Easter brunch. Breakfast casseroles are a thing for good reason. You can prep them the day before. They’re great for serving a crowd, and they’re endlessly adaptable. This is my take on the popular Everything Bagel Breakfast Casserole. It’s a deep-dish merging of grated cheese, bagels, eggs, plant-based sausage along with the crunch and savoriness of everything bagel seasoning. The bagels that break through the top get beautifully crunchy and kissed with oven-toasted cheese. Give it a try!Fregola Sarda
Fregola Sarda: It’s a favorite recipe from Near & Far. The perfect lunchy, brunch dish, and it’s made with fregola. Fregola is a beautiful, tasty Sardinian pasta made from hard durum wheat flour – rolled, sun-dried, and toasted to a mix of shades of yellow, gold, and brown. The pasta is rustic and nutty, each grain with a raggy surface adept at catching flavor. So good!
Deep dish quiche
Deep Dish Quiche: The deep dish quiche of your dreams. It’s made with a flaky all-butter crust. The filling is silky smooth and creamy, while still being perfectly sliceable. Switch up the add-ins based on the seasons – roasted cherry tomatoes in summer, winter squash later in the year.

Frittata Recipe
A Tasty Frittata: I love a good frittata as part of a brunch spread. You can pre-bake them a bit ahead of time which opens up the oven for other dishes if needed. This is a tasty, super adaptable frittata recipe made with potatoes, onions, and eggs drizzled with a cilantro chile sauce. Don’t skimp on the sauce!
Waffle Recipe
The Best Waffles: You’re looking at the waffles I make for (literally) every family brunch, and they’re perfect for an Easter brunch gathering. You can set up a toppings bar, and let people make their own, or pre-make them and hold in a warm oven. If you’re a waffle fan, please give these a try. Everyone needs a solid waffle recipe in their back pocket, and I’m quite sure these are the end of the waffle conversation for me. Enjoy!
Red Fruit Salad
Red Fruit Salad: Red fruit salad, and arguably so much better than old-school fruit salad! It’s perfect as spring rounds the bend into summer. A simple, seasonal fruit salad made with plump strawberries, sweet cherries, lemon zest, and coriander brown sugar. Five ingredients. So good. If cherries aren’t quite in season where you are, go with 100% strawberries.
Pancake Recipe
Classic Pancakes: If you’re more of a pancake family, this is a classic pancake recipe that delivers a beautiful, classic stack with impossibly tender crumb and golden edges. It has been a favorite go-to since I first posted it in 2006. The pancakes have lightness and lift, and good color. The recipe is also endlessly adaptable based on what you have on hand.
Pancake Recipe
Sheet Pan Frittata: If you like to serve family style, a sheet pan frittata is another great option. You don’t need much to make a great one. This one starts with a dusting of lemon zest (key!) across a sheet pan, and uses a simple egg, cream, salt and pepper base.

Pancake Recipe
Tofu Scramble: This tofu scramble is fast, savory, and flavorful egg-free brunch option. Made with spinach, curry powder, nutritional yeast, garlic, and onions, this is the version we’ve been making for years! Also, super adaptable to whatever vegetables and seasonings you have on hand.

Omelette Recipe
Skinny Omelettes: Setting up an omelette “station” with a range of toppings works great if you have a casual brunch situation. People can make and customize omelettes to their liking with fillings like caramelized onions, pesto, herbs, choice of cheeses, etc. These omelettes are made with eggs cooked crepe-thin and stuffed. A delicious and lighter alternative to heavy, cheese-stuffed omelette recipes – great for lunch and brunch.

Easter Brunch Ideas: Breads & Cakes

Braided Onion Bread
Braided Onion Bread: Every Easter brunch spread welcomes a statement piece. This is one of my favorites. Made with a rich, buttery, yeast-based dough, each of the four strands in the braid is stuffed with a caramelized onion and grated cheese mixture. If you’ve never baked a braided loaf before, I’ll admit that stuffing the strands adds a layer of complexity, but the whole process is incredibly forgiving if you commit and keep going. Give it a try!
glazed lemon cake
Glazed Lemon Cake: A sunny, bright addition to any Easter spread. This lemon cake is moist, fragrant and topped with a salted lemon glaze. It is made with lots of lemon zest and freshly squeezed lemon juice. You don’t need a mixer, the olive oil based batter comes together quickly, and you’re not much longer than an hour from having a beautiful cake to share.

Cheddar Jalapeño Oatmeal Bread
Cheddar Jalapeño Oatmeal Bread: This oatmeal bread wins the award for best toast. It’s a hearty oat-flecked loaf with a buttermilk base studded generously with melty cubes of cheddar cheese and punctuated with thin slices of jalapeño pepper. Where the cheese touches the pan it turns to golden-crispy perfection.
Cinnamon Rolls Recipe
Cinnamon Rolls: If making these cinnamon rolls for Easter brunch, I’m going to make a suggestion. Swap out the cinnamon for citrus. Like, use the zest of a lemon or two in the filling and a tablespoon or so of lemon juice in the icing along with the heavy cream called for as the liquids in the icing.

What To Make with Extra Eggs

If you find yourself with extra cartons of eggs after Easter, here are some ideas.

Deviled Eggs Recipe
Deviled Eggs: I love these so much – beautiful and delicious deviled eggs made with an herb-flecked filling and topped with toasted almonds.
Egg Salad Sandwich
Egg Salad: My go-to egg salad, and what I turn to when craving an egg salad sandwich. This post talks you through all the little tweaks and tips that go into making the perfect egg salad sandwich. Served on garlic-rubbed toasted bread with chopped celery, onion, and whole-grain mustard.

Shredded Egg Salad
Shredded Egg Salad: A fun alternative to classic egg salad (above). This one is made by shredding hard boiled eggs on a box grater. The resulting shredded egg salad is light, fluffy, and bright. Pictured here on avocado toast with scallions, pickled red onions, a pinch of curry powder and sesame seeds.

Easter Brunch Menu Ideas

Here are a few sample menus to start with. When I say toppings bar, I just mean putting out a range of different topping options. It’s a great way to let everyone make omelettes or waffles exactly the way they like it.

Menu #1

  • Everything Bagel Breakfast Casserole
  • Strawberry Salad
  • Ginger Grapefruit Juice

Menu #2

  • Cheddar Jalapeño Oatmeal Bread
  • A Tasty Frittata or Skinny Omelettes with Toppings Bar
  • Iced Green Tea
  • Glazed Lemon Cake

Menu #3

Menu #4

  • Waffles with Toppings Bar
  • A Tasty Frittata
  • Homemade Strawberry Almond Milk
Easter Brunch Drink Ideas

Freshly squeezed juices, or homemade drinks are an easy way to make a brunch menu feel extra special. Here are a few favorites from past brunches.pineapple coconut water
Pineapple Coconut Water: A beautiful shade of Easter yellow, this beauty is always first to go at any brunch spread. Freshly juiced pineapple is at the heart of this quencher – made with coconut water, lime, and straight ginger juice. It’s invigorating, fragrant, hydrating, and that pure, intense shade of yellow that somehow tips us off to its strength and vitality before ever picking up the glass.
Homemade Strawberry Almond Milk
Homemade Strawberry Almond Milk: As good as it sounds. Ripe strawberries plus fresh almond milk were made for each other. And yes, you can use frozen berries!
Iced Green Tea
Iced Green Tea: As good as it sounds. Ripe strawberries plus fresh almond milk were made for each other. And yes, you can use frozen berries!

freshly squeezed grapefruit juice
Ginger-kissed Grapefruit Juice: This grapefruit juice will jolt you to attention. It’s just the thing if you’re looking for something bright, invigorating, spicy, and full volume citrus. Steep grated ginger in a bit of sugared water, and then strain it into a lime & grapefruit juice blend.

 

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White Bean Soup with Garlic and Olive Oil
100+ Vegetarian Recipes90 Best Soup RecipesDinner IdeasGluten Free RecipesMain Course Recipes

This white bean soup is rustic, silky, and built around plump beans simmered in a saffron-tinted broth. A squeeze of citrus, crumbled feta, and chopped olives makes each bite special.

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The framework for this white bean soup comes from a wonderful recipe in Casa Moro, the second cookbook in the Moro cookbook series. Over the years, I’ve drifted on the ratio of ingredients quite a bit – heavier on the beans, lighter on the fennel, more casual with the saffron. I’ve also come to love finishing the soup with a few toppings I never skip (or skimp on): a squeeze of fresh orange or tangerine juice, crumbled feta, and lots of chopped olives. The saffron-tinted broth is silky and beautiful, and the soup itself is rustic, filling and exactly the way I like to eat.
White Bean Soup in a wide bowl

White Bean Soup: Canned vs. Dried?

Let’s talk about how I like to pull this soup together, starting with the beans. Many white bean soup recipes call for canned beans but I always cook this soup using dried beans for a couple of reasons. First, they maintain shape and structure well, instead of going to mush in the pot during the simmer. Second, cooking beans from dried gives you both plump flavorful beans and the rich broth that comes along with them. That broth is the stealth secret ingredient here – when you change it to something different (water, a different broth, etc.) it changes the foundation of the soup.
white bean soup in a bowl topped with feta cheese

What To Serve With White Bean Soup

There are a lot of ways to make this soup even more of a meal. Here are a few ideas:

  • Put an egg on it: More times than not I top this soup with a spoon-fried egg (pictured), or a poached egg. You get the added protein and extra staying power.
  • Side Salad: Soup and salad is a classic combination for a reason. I love this cilantro salad alongside this soup, or something like this easy kale salad. Or, just poke around the salad recipes to find other ideas.
  • Artichokes: If you see baby artichokes when you’re shopping for the fennel called for in this recipe, grab them and cook them in olive oil until they’re nice and brown and caramelized. I wrote this post about how to cook artichokes if you need a bit more instruction. Make a big platter full!
  • Good Bread: thick slabs, well toasted, preferably rubbed with a peeled clove of garlic.
Variations:

I love the combination of caramelized fennel, saffron, and a squeeze of citrus in this soup, but you can certainly take it in other directions. For example, in place of the saffron, you could try a favorite curry powder. Just keep in mind that part of what makes this soup special is the subtle way the flavors meld together – they form a somewhat subtle, harmonious chorus. Stronger spices will bring something different entirely. Still good, but different.
white bean soup in a wide bowl with various toppings

Can I Freeze This Soup?

Yes! This soup freezes like a dream. Allow it to cool completely. Transfer to a freezer-safe container or bag, and freeze in portions. To reheat, I usually let the soup thaw a bit. Put a small amount of water in the bottom of a soup pan, transfer the block of frozen soup to the pan, cover, and heat over medium for a while. Stir now and then.

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Asparagus Ribbon Salad with Crispy Chickpeas and Hot Honey
100+ Vegetarian RecipesGluten Free RecipesSalad RecipesSpringWhole Food Plant-Based Diet Recipes

Shaving asparagus into ribbons turns it into something completely different — delicate, tender, and perfect for a big spring salad.

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This asparagus ribbon salad is all about contrasts. You have silky ribbons of asparagus piled with crispy chickpeas, toasted almonds and coconut, and snappy bites of apple. A vibrant lemon olive oil dressing pulls everything together, and a drizzle of hot honey softens the lemony edge. It’s a bit of a springtime weirdo, but in a really good way.
Asparagus Ribbon Salad on a Platter

If you’ve never shaved asparagus into ribbons, I encourage you to give it a try. The resulting tangles of asparagus are delicate, tender, and wonderful. They absorb dressing nicely, and welcome all sorts of crunchy, contrast  ingredients you might have around – nuts, seeds, fried shallots, etc. That’s (basically) how we ended up with today’s recipe.

Asparagus Ribbon Salad on a Platter

How To Make Asparagus Ribbons

Shaving raw asparagus into delicate ribbons is my favorite way to enjoy uncooked asparagus. The ribbons are delicate, becoming instantly tender when tossed with a simple lemon oil.  The key here is using a Y-shaped vegetable peeler. Beyond that, a few tips:

  • Buy medium-thick asparagus, thin asparagus is hard to peel into ribbons.
  • Wash asparagus and snap off the thick woody ends.
    Asparagus Ribbon Salad on a Platter
  • Start peeling your ribbons just below the tip of the asparagus. Rotate if needed to get as many ribbons as possible per spear. I usually have a bit left, the part that is too hard to get to with the peeler. Slice that piece (and the tip) into thin strips. Pictured below.
    Asparagus Ribbon Salad on a Platter

Place the crunchy toppings on your salad at the last minute so they retain their crispness. Enjoy! -h
Asparagus Ribbon Salad on a Platter

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Crispy Chickpeas
100+ Vegetarian Recipes260+ Vegan RecipesGluten Free RecipesHigh Protein RecipesQuick RecipesSide Dish Recipes

Crispy roasted chickpeas are one of my favorite ways to add crunch and a bit of protein to salads, bowls, and roasted vegetables. There are a few tricks to getting them extra crispy crunchy, and not sad.

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I’m posting this crispy chickpea recipe because I use them a lot (like in this asparagus ribbon salad), and there are a number of tricks you need to deploy to get them deluxe crunchy.
Crispy chickpeas on a plate

Crispy Chickpeas: Pro Tips

Sad, chewy chickpeas are not what you’re after here. And there are a number of things you can do to get golden, super-crisp chickpeas.

  • Dry well: Get your chickpeas extra dry before baking, and you’ve won half the battle. – Hot oven: Crank that oven up, get it screaming hot.
    Chickpeas drying in a kitchen towel before baking
  • Hot pan: Preheat your baking sheet. Chickpeas coated in oil hitting a hot pan is the pairing you’re after, and the hot pan gets things crisping more quickly.
  • Don’t overcrowd: If you cram your chickpeas onto a small pan they’ll steam. The opposite of what you want for crispiness.

Crispy chickpeas on a plate

Ways To Use Crispy Chickpeas
  • In salads: Swap in some crispy chickpeas for the regular chickpeas in this quinoa salad, toss some into this favorite coleslaw, or add some to this wedge salad. If none of those strike the right note, browse the salad recipes – lots of salads there that would welcome some crispy chickpeas. Use them in place of croutons.
  • Lunch on the go: I love including crispy chickpeas in bento-style, feel-good lunches.
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Strawberry Scones
Baking RecipesBreakfast RecipesDessert Recipes

These strawberry scones check all the boxes. Made with juicy sweet strawberries, they’re tender and rustic with golden craggy edges and a sugar-crusted top.

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There are some things to know before you jump into making these strawberry scones. First, the foundation of a great scone is a good recipe and cold ingredients. The cold ingredients will make the dough much easier to work with. Second, let your scones bake long enough, really keep an eye on things. For the scone style you see here, you don’t want pale. Much of the flavor happens as the sugars, and butter, and edges of each scone brown. Lastly, scones made with fresh fruit are best warm from the oven. Bake just before you want to enjoy them whenever possible. Or do a quick reheat.
strawberry scones on a baking sheet

Strawberry Scones: The Ingredients

A few words about the ingredients I use here and why.

  • Flours: Most scone recipes use all-purpose flour exclusively. But I find that adding a percentage of whole wheat flour can really anchor a scone and bring flavor dimension. Don’t worry, you won’t run into any dreaded whole-wheat dryness with these. The whole wheat flour really lends rustic farmhouse vibes in the best way possible with a tender crumb. Now when I go back to tasting more conventional scones, they end up tasting too one-dimensional to me.
  • Sugar: I’ve baked these scones with a rotating cast of sugars over the years. Different amounts, different types. I feel like this recipe needs the sharp edge of white sugar to balance the other ingredients in these scones – for example, the tangy buttermilk or sour cream. Just sweet enough is what I was after here, and for whatever reason the brown sugar tend to get lost. And a blend didn’t do the job either.
    ingredients for making a strawberry scone recipe arranged on a marble counter
  • Other: I use quite a bit less baking powder and baking soda than other scone recipes. You don’t really need more than the amount in this recipe, and the buttermilk neutralizes any residual off flavor from the leavening agents.

strawberry scones on a baking sheet

Variations:

The recipe below is for classic strawberry scones with a bit of zest. Aside from the zest, they’re straight-forward, direct, a good scone foundation. That said, I often switch them up with one or two of the following:

  • citrus: zest of one lemon  or lime (mix into wet ingredients)
  • rosemary: I love the combination of strawberry and rosemary. Finely chop 2 five-inch sprigs of rosemary – 1 1/2 teaspoons or so. (Add to dry ingredients)
  • black pepper: black pepper and strawberry are a classic combination. Add scant 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper to dry ingredients. Adjust with more in future batches if you love it.
  • poppy seeds: add 1/3 cup to dry ingredients.
  • toasted almonds: be sure they’ve cooled completely. (Add to dry ingredients)
  • crystalized ginger: adds jolts of chewy ginger sugar. Chop it small and add it along with the wet ingredients.
  • icing: lot of people like an iced drizzle over their scones. If you would rather have a drizzle top, here’s the plan. Use lemon zest in place of the orange zest called for in the recipe. Skip the sugar sprinkle, but do the egg wash. Allow scones to cool completely after baking, and use the salted lemon glaze from this glazed lemon cake recipe. Or do half and half so you can enjoy the sugar-topped scones warm.
 
Making Strawberry Scones By Hand

The recipe below assumes you have an electric mixer with a paddle attachment, but making them by hand is also possible and will save you some dishes! To make these scones by hand, watch the above video and reference these instructions:

  1. Mix the dry ingredients well and then turn out into a pile on your counter top. Sprinkle the cold butter across the flour mixture and use your hands to rub the butter into the flour until it is evenly distributed throughout. You can use a dough scraper (or pastry cutter) to chop through the pile a bit and break up any butter lumps. You want the mixture to be sandy, with tiny pebbles.
  2. Shape: Wrangle the flour mixture back into a pile with a dough scraper and make a well in the middle (the way you do when making homemade pasta). Pour the wet ingredients into the well and use your dough scraper to fold and mix the flour into the wet ingredients. Keep going until there is no dry flour left and a dough has started to form. At this point sprinkle the berries across the top, and fold them into the mixture as well.
    strawberry scone dough cut into wedges prior to baking
  3. Gather the dough into a ball and proceed with the recipe as written – slicing the dough into wedges and so forth.
More Scone Recipes strawberry scones on a baking sheet
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Crispy Piadina
100+ Vegetarian Recipes260+ Vegan RecipesAppetizersBaking Recipes

Serve a dramatic, oversized, crispy piadina alongside your favorite dips and spreads. They’re better (and cheaper!) than most crackers you buy, the dough is a breeze to make, and you can accent them with all sorts of seeds, herbs, or spices.

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I’m writing about these crispy piadina (thin Italian flatbread) because of a favorite parking space. Whenever we drive to San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood we park in the tower next to the police station. If you drive up to the roof you can enjoy an amazing view of the city, so we always park there. When you walk out of the garage, make a left, walk a short distance, and you’ll likely see what I saw. In the front window of Toscano Brothers there are stacks of gorgeous flatbreads. The first time I saw them, I walked straight in and bought both flavors. One had garlic oil, black and white sesame seeds, orange blossom honey, and salt. There other had garlic, rosemary, and salt. The car on the way home smelled like a bakery.

Crispy piadina flatbreads on a plate

Quite honestly I’m not sure what to call these. Toscano Brothers calls theirs Piattina and in parentheses (Italian Flats). They have a lot in common with certain piadina (thin Italian flatbread), but there are notable departures with this version. Traditional piadina are cooked in a skillet (or round clay comal-like pan). These are baked. Most piadina retain their softness and foldability. These, in contrast, have a range of textures – the thick parts retain some softness while the thin parts are baked long enough to snap and shatter.

I love them. They’re large and dramatic, rustic and imperfectly perfect. You can see (below) where I served the Toscano Brothers piattina with smoked labneh.  A few weeks back, instead of driving across the city, I started baking my own version. I make my favorite pizza dough late in the afternoon, let it rest overnight in the refrigerator, then roll out and bake the piadina the next day when convenient. So simple, so good!
Crispy piadina flatbreads on a plate with honey

Crispy Piadina: Variations

As you can imagine, the opportunity for variations here is immense. I did a version with 2 teaspoons of herbes de Provence, and that was really good. I think these are going to be a staple around here, so there are ideas for a lot of variations to try swimming around in my head.  I also noticed a big cracker / flatbread recipe in Mariana Velasquez’s beautiful new book Revel (bought it yesterday) – she calls them Long Seedy Crackers. Her take uses an egg wash across the dough before sprinkling with seeds which I’m sure gives nice sheen and color. Her dough is also interesting in that it is a blend of all-purpose flour and brown rice flour, no leavener, and a good amount of olive oil. Excited to try it! I’ll update here with variations over time. In the meantime, enjoy!

A Little Too Thin, A Little Too Hot

I wanted to show one of the pitfalls you can run into with these. The first few rounds I made I ran the oven hotter, pulled each piadina thinner, and made them extra large. See below. Sometimes I’d add a few decorative slashes as well.

Piadina flatbread dough on a baking sheet before baking

The thin portions were getting too dark too fast, and the edges stayed too light. This round pictured below was baked at 450°F, and the dough ball was about 170g spread across a large baking sheet. See how dark it got? I started having much more reliable results dialing the oven back to 400°F, and working with slightly smaller dough balls – 125g.

Overbaked piadina flatbreads close-up
With that approach (pictured below), I got more even coloring, and it was an easier, less intense bake overall. You can also, certainly, cook these in a large skillet.

Close-up photo of piadina on a plate with sesame seeds

Have fun with these and let me know if you give them a try!

Piadina flatbreads served and arranged on a table with other objects

More Crackers and Flatbread Recipes Crispy piadina flatbreads on a plate with honey
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