Green Bean
Nopalito Salsa
This unusual salsa calls for canned or bottled nopalitos, the stems of the prickly pear cactus. Available in the Mexican section of many supermarkets, they're sometimes labeled natural tender cactus. If you cannot find nopalitos at your local market, simply substitute cooked green beans. Use this tasty salsa as you would any other--with meats, chips and tacos.
By Donna Baker
Sausage Stew
By Joanie Moscoe
Tangy Eggplant, Long Beans, and Cherry Tomatoes with Roasted Peanuts
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Sweet-and-Sour Green Beans
This vinegary dressing reflects the tastes and traditions of the sizable German population in the Midwest.
Steamed Sea Bass, Cantonese Style
By Michael Tong
Potato Salad with Olives, Green Beans and Red Onion
Potato salad gets perked up with herbs, vegetables and a terrific dressing. Serve the salad warm or at room temperature.
Swordfish Niçoise
Don't marinate the fish more than 15 minutes, or it will be cooked by the citric acid in the lemon juice (like the Latin dish seviche). And don't toss the vegetables until serving time, or the vinegar will discolor the beans.
Green Beans with Citrus Butter Sauce
"As a kid, I'd accompany my mother to her job at the racetrack, where she would lead the horses out to the starting gate," writes Michael Hunter of Studio City, California. "Eventually I was helping out in the stalls, and when I got older, I became a jockey. My mother was also the person who, in a roundabout way, inspired my other passion: cooking. I'd come home from school, and she would have prepared something from a box or can. I didn't always like what was on the dinner table, so one day I asked her to buy me a cookbook. Pretty soon I was making dinner for us almost every night. Now, after seventeen years of racing horses and cooking for family and friends, I'm making the jump to professional cooking."
These beans are particularly delicious with Michael's Sugar-Seared Salmon with Cream Sauce.
Vegetable and Chicken Curry
This Cambodian curry is traditionally made with beef, but Mao Sokhen says his American friends prefer the chicken variation. Though you can use any brand of Thai red curry paste and Asian fish sauce for this recipe, Mao likes the brands recommended below because he finds they produce a dish that is closer to classic Cambodian flavor.