Egg Noodle
Grandma Gitta’s Chicken Paprikash
Tender chicken, savory paprika sauce, and lots of noodles.
By Nina Moskowitz
Noodle Kugel
If grandma won’t reveal her secrets, let this classic noodle kugel recipe be your guide.
By Phyllis Roberts
Khao Soy Gai
The combination of flavors and textures in this chicken khao soy (also spelled khao soi), which marries creamy curry sauce and silky egg noodles, is magical.
By Hong Thaimee
Tuna Noodle Casserole
This from-scratch tuna noodle casserole is creamy, flavorful, and really easy to throw together; it makes a crowd-pleasing weeknight dinner and even freezes well.
By Kemp Minifie
Mushroom Stroganoff
Stroganoff is endlessly comforting—and this version can be made in under 30 minutes.
By Sabrina Snyder
Steak Stroganoff
This is not your grandma’s beef stroganoff. We updated our favorite parts of the classic by swapping in a medium-rare strip steak and adding a squeeze of lemon and sprinkling of dill for a fresh take on dinner.
By Anna Stockwell
Honey-Garlic Noodles
These honey-garlic noodles are perfect as is, or as a side dish served with chicken, steak, or a fried egg or tossed with your favorite stir-fried veggies. The recipe comes together very quickly, so get everything diced, sliced, minced, and prepped first.
By Dennis Prescott
Old-Fashioned Chicken Noodle Soup
On a cold winter day, this hearty soup is practically a meal in itself.
Pasta With Rock Shrimp, Chile, and Lemon
This recipe makes more bonito butter than you need. Use the smoky, slightly salty mixture to top your next steak, or to sauté greens.
By Nick Curtola
Kimchi-Braised Chicken With Bacon
Rethink comfort food with kimchi—a type of spicy Korean sauerkraut—which makes this slow-cooked, tomatoey braise tangy, spicy, and deeply flavorful.
By Chris Morocco
Wild Mushroom Noodle Soup
Make your own broth with little more than dried porcini mushrooms for this light, filling, and deeply flavorful vegetarian soup.
By Katherine Sacks
Double-Dark Chicken Noodle Soup
Our best-ever chicken stock begins with wings, which have a high skin-to-meat ratio. Browning the wings results in lots of caramelized nooks and crannies that imbue the stock with a deep, savory flavor.
By Claire Saffitz
Chicken Khao Soi
A simple curry paste gives this northern Thai-inspired soup surprising depth of flavor.
By Ravin Nakjaroen
Sesame Noodles
A modern version of a Cantonese classic, this noodle dish got a reworking in Epicurious member Roni Jordan’s Massachusetts kitchen and has been a family staple for more than twenty-five years. These sesame- and soy-sauced noodles will easily become a favorite whether you enjoy them warm, at room temperature, or straight out of the fridge three days later. Toss in your favorite veggies for a multifaceted vegetarian meal or serve it alongside grilled chicken or flank steak.
Spicy Sesame Noodles with Chopped Peanuts and Thai Basil
This Thai-inspired noodle dish dovetails four essential flavors: sweet, sour, salty, and bitter. Seek out Thai basil, which imparts clean, crisp notes of anise and mint.
Venetian “Mac and Cheese”
Although it’s not a true-blue, all-American macaroni and cheese because it’s made with wide egg noodles rather than the more traditional elbow macaroni or small shell pasta, this is probably the version I make most often. It’s a dish I fell in love with when I first had it years ago at Harry’s Bar in Venice. Later I re-created it at home as the ultimate comfort food and also to bring back memories of Venice.
Chicken Paprikash
Richly colored with paprika, this traditional Hungarian entrée is full bodied and satisfying. It goes well with Balsamic-Marinated Vegetables (page 78).
Mama’s Awesome Chicken Noodle Soup
I love living in Oklahoma. I do miss my family in Georgia, but luckily I get to travel back and forth a lot for visits. My Georgia family has also made the trek to Oklahoma several times, so now both places feel like home. Only once have I gotten so homesick I thought I wouldn’t make it, and that was because I was really sick with the flu and Mama wasn’t there to take care of me. Sometimes nobody will do except Mama! She made this soup for me, froze it in quart containers, packed it in dry ice (who knew you could get dry ice in Monticello?), and shipped it overnight to me in a Styrofoam cooler. When I got it the next morning, I cried, ate some soup, cried, ate some more soup, and thanked God for the most awesome mom on the planet!
Potlikker Noodles with Mustard Greens
A leftover ham bone makes a great substitute for the ham hock in this pasta recipe. The rest of the flavor comes from braised greens, smoky potlikker, and hot pepper sauce.
By Jason Alley