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Onion

Seared Steak Lettuce Cups

If you're looking for fresh hits of color and crunch for the buffet, here's your answer.

Caramelized Onion and Shallot Dip

Roasting the onions and shallots takes this dip way out of the box.

Roasted Pepper and Onion Salad with Blue Cheese

Add Sherry vinegar right to the baking dish to turn the juices from the roasted vegetables into a simple, vibrant vinaigrette.

Tomato Sauce

I make tomato sauce often. I make a batch to use that same night, and freeze what is left over to pull out and cook with when I want to throw something together quickly, like a grilled pizza or a pasta. A ricer or food mill is an inexpensive piece of kitchen equipment and there are many sizes. This is the best way to puree this sauce.

Sour Cream and Onion Dip

Ditch the store-bought seasoning packet in favor of this DIY version that combines slowly caramelized onions with tangy sour cream.

Ginger-Sesame Sauce

This spiced-up Asian-inspired sauce is perfect for dipping French fries or crudité, or for drizzling over seared chicken or fish.

Curried Sweet Potato Pancakes

On one of my first trips to India, at a bus stop in Poona, there was a street stand where the vendor was roasting potatoes over charcoal, chopping them, and tossing them with curry spices and crispy onions. He served the mixture wrapped in a piece of newspaper. It was amazing, and it inspired this dish.
There are so many curry spice mixtures from around the world. This recipe employs one of the most common. You can use either yams or sweet potatoes in this recipe.

Bacon-Cheddar Burgers with Caramelized Onions

In our never-ending quest for the best burger, we think we've hit on an outstanding version that requires nothing more than a trip to the supermarket and a short sojourn in the freezer for the bacon. Sure, there are those DIY purists who are going to buy several different beef cuts from a high-end butcher—if not butcher the beef themselves from their own grass-fed steer—then coarsely grind it with their own sterilized meat grinder, but most of us just want an easy recipe for a really great backyard burger.
Burger-meisters might be shocked, but this burger does best by being cooked a bit more slowly, over indirect heat. So sit back, pop open a cold one, and let these burgers baste themselves into a sublime place. Editor's Note: This recipe is part of Gourmet's Modern Menu for Burger Bash. Menu also includes Homemade French Fries with Five Dipping Sauces and Strawberry Cheesecake Milkshake.

Grilled Pork Chops with Peach Relish

Toss the season's first ripe peaches into a tangy relish to spoon over smoky grilled pork chops for the first official day of summer.

Fried Onion Dippers with Balsamic Ketchup

Don't say we didn't warn you! Once you taste our batter-fried onion dippers, those blooming onions and onion rings you've always loved will seem so yesterday. These onion dippers may just be the best new invention since someone first thought to fry an onion.
By cutting the onion lengthwise into wedges and then separating them into layers, you end up with gracefully curved pieces. The finger-friendly dippers are battered and fried, transforming them into crisp, lacy-jacketed vehicles perfect for scooping up the sweet and tangy ketchup. Editor's Note: This recipe is part of Gourmet's Modern Menu for Summer Fair Favorites. Menu also includes Turkey Meatball Garlic Bread Heroes and Frozen Chocolate-Dipped Bananas with Peanut Brittle.

Charred Corn Salad with Basil and Tomatoes

No room on the grill? Cut the kernels from the cobs and char with 1 tablespoon olive oil in a cast-iron skillet on the stove.

Vegetable Fried Rice with Eggs and Greens

You can easily adapt this recipe to vegetables you already have to make a quick, healthy dinner.

Steak Skewers with Scallion Dipping Sauce

Pelaccio flips the kebab script by cubing luxurious cuts of steak and marinating them in coconut milk, garlic, and chiles. Try this with tri-tip, top sirloin cap steak, or rib eye; just make sure a strip of fat is still intact; you'll use it to thread onto the skewers.

Tuna Burgers

Mujadara

Lentils, rice, olive oil, and onions—this Middle Eastern standard is the ultimate pantry recipe. It's also the classic example of a dish that's greater than the sum of its parts. There are literally dozens of recipes for mujadara out there—each country, possibly even each family, seems to have its own version. The one I like best is adapted from Claudia Roden's Book of Jewish Food. The crispy onion topping is the best part, so go ahead and make a lot. NOTE: Lentils, like all dried beans, vary in their cooking time depending on several factors, including age. Yours may take longer to become tender, but they shouldn't take much more than an hour. Hard water can also affect the cooking time—if your water is hard, use bottled water.

Summer Corn and Cod Chowder

No-fry zone: We let the fish 'n' chips fave go au naturel.

Ramp Tagliatelle

Every spring people make a hullabaloo about ramps, the wild leeks that grow in the forests of the East Coast, for good reason: they're wonderful, with a garlic-heavy leek flavor and a subtle sweetness. I pickle the ramps, put them in just about everything we eat (they're particularly great in omelets), and give them away by the armload. This pasta is a simple way to highlight their flavor.

Halibut with Spring Onion and Summer Squash Saute

The keys to this dish? Use as many types of squash as you can, and heat the oil in the skillet until it's almost smoking.

Tony's Steak

This steak tastes best when marinated overnight, so try to start the recipe a day ahead.
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