Pescatarian
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19 Halibut Recipes for Flaky White Fish That Wows
Come for the weeknight halibut recipes, stay for the party-ready fish dinners.
By Meredith Stettner and The Editors of Epicurious
Quick Vegetable Massaman Curry
This vegetable Massaman curry gives you the best of both worlds: a full-flavored and ultra-comforting curry that’s also unfussy enough to whip up on any weeknight.
By Leela Punyaratabandhu
Easy, Cheesy Tuna Melt
The best tuna melt is properly cheesy and made with a tuna salad that’s good enough to shine on its own.
By Genevieve Yam
Jarred Peppers and Olives Are My Weeknight Dinner Dream Team
Tossed with pasta or cooked into shrimp and rice, the sweet and briny pair make a killer sauce.
By Kendra Vaculin
A Pescatarian Comfort Food Meal Plan for 2022
We’re resolving to do away with empty resolutions and to get back to cooking and eating what we love.
By Matthew Zuras
The Official Meal Plan of COOK90 2020
This year's month-long cooking challenge is heavy on vegetables, big on grains, and features weekend recipes from some of the best food writers in the world.
By David Tamarkin
Weekly Meal Plan: July 15-19
Foolproof Grilled Fish, Caesar Chicken Sandwiches, and Greek-Style Beans
By Debbie Koenig
Sunny-Side-up Eggs on Mustard-Creamed Spinach with Crispy Crumbs
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Toasted Manioc Flour With Eggs and Scallions
Farofa is the term for a side dish using toasted farinha de mandioca—in English, manioc flour, which is a dried flour similar in looks and texture to breadcrumbs, made from yucca. The making of farofa as a dish couldn't be easier. It is plain manioc flour toasted in butter. A few of the classic farofa dishes include eggs and scallions, eggs and bacon, banana, bell peppers, and dendê oil, green beans and carrots, peas and corn, and so on and so forth. Farofa can be extremely dry, since the manioc flour immediately sucks up all the juices from anything it encounters, especially when it's served plain. The trick to making a moist farofa is to use a small amount of manioc flour in proportion to the other components, turning a side dish into a savory accompaniment that is so tempting, you may even forget there is a main course.
By Leticia Moreinos Schwartz
Tuna-Stuffed Eggs
Uova Ripiene di Tonno
Recipes are some of my favorite souvenirs of memorable dining experiences. Whenever I make these eggs, for example, I am reminded of the first time I ate them at Belvedere, a favorite restaurant in La Morra in Piedmont. The owner told me what was in them, and at home I experimented with the proportions of the ingredients to get the flavor I remembered.
By Michele Scicolone
Rose Water Syrup
(Sharbat-e gol-e Mohammadi)
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from Najmieh Batmanglij's's book New Food Of Life. Batmanglij also shared some helpful cooking tips exclusively with Epicurious, which we've added at the bottom of the page.
To read more about Batmanglij and Persian cuisine, click here.
By Najmieh Batmanglij
Poached Eggs with Tomato Cilantro Sauce
In Mexico, this breakfast dish is called huevos ahogados, meaning "drowned eggs," since the eggs are served in soup bowls with a lot of sauce.
Potato and Gruyère Croquettes
Great served as a side dish with roast chicken, pork chops or veal chops.
Strawberry Cream Cake
The more succulent the berries, the better. The cake layers absorb the juices, which is why this cake must be assembled at least 8 hours before serving.
Turkish Poached Eggs with Yogurt and Spicy Sage Butter
Eggs are a staple of the Turkish diet. An ingredient in many dishes, they are also prepared on their own as a main course for lunch or as an appetizer for dinner. Here they are poached, set on a bed of yogurt (another staple) and drizzled with a red pepper-sage butter. The red pepper that fires up Turkish cooking - a cross between paprika and dried crushed red pepper - is much more popular than black pepper, especially outside the large cities.