20 Braises & Stews to Make Your House Smell Amazing — Recipes from The Kitchn

Winter weather calls for cooking a meal low and slow on the stove for a couple of hours. The spices mixed with the meat or veggies (and maybe even a splash of wine) are guaranteed to make your home smell wonderful for hours. Stews and braises are closely related, with a defining difference: the amount of liquid used. But the most important thing they have in common? How delicious they are when served up for dinner on a cold, snowy night.

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Eating Fresh from the Pantry Is a Matter of Perspective — Menus from The Kitchn

This week we dove into a few cookbooks to look at recipes that exemplified what it means to cook fresh from the pantry. The expected canned and jarred foods make an appearance, but the real lesson here is that cooking fresh from the pantry all depends on how willing you are to expand the definition of fresh.

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Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Looking for an easy side dish of greens? Of course you are. We all need more greens in our diet, right? At least I do.

Chard is one of my favorite greens to cook because it’s more substantial than spinach (which seems to melt to nothing when you cook it), but more tender and less bitter than kale.

Usually I just sauté chopped chard in olive oil with some garlic. This time I peeled a parsnip down to its tough core and tossed the parsnips ribbons in with the chard.

Continue reading “Sautéed Chard with Parsnip” »

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Looking for an easy side dish of greens? Of course you are. We all need more greens in our diet, right? At least I do.

Chard is one of my favorite greens to cook because it’s more substantial than spinach (which seems to melt to nothing when you cook it), but more tender and less bitter than kale.

Usually I just sauté chopped chard in olive oil with some garlic. This time I peeled a parsnip down to its tough core and tossed the parsnips ribbons in with the chard.

Continue reading “Sautéed Chard with Parsnip” »

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Looking for an easy side dish of greens? Of course you are. We all need more greens in our diet, right? At least I do.

Chard is one of my favorite greens to cook because it’s more substantial than spinach (which seems to melt to nothing when you cook it), but more tender and less bitter than kale.

Usually I just sauté chopped chard in olive oil with some garlic. This time I peeled a parsnip down to its tough core and tossed the parsnips ribbons in with the chard.

Continue reading “Sautéed Chard with Parsnip” »

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Looking for an easy side dish of greens? Of course you are. We all need more greens in our diet, right? At least I do.

Chard is one of my favorite greens to cook because it’s more substantial than spinach (which seems to melt to nothing when you cook it), but more tender and less bitter than kale.

Usually I just sauté chopped chard in olive oil with some garlic. This time I peeled a parsnip down to its tough core and tossed the parsnips ribbons in with the chard.

Continue reading “Sautéed Chard with Parsnip” »

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Looking for an easy side dish of greens? Of course you are. We all need more greens in our diet, right? At least I do.

Chard is one of my favorite greens to cook because it’s more substantial than spinach (which seems to melt to nothing when you cook it), but more tender and less bitter than kale.

Usually I just sauté chopped chard in olive oil with some garlic. This time I peeled a parsnip down to its tough core and tossed the parsnips ribbons in with the chard.

Continue reading “Sautéed Chard with Parsnip” »

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Sautéed Chard with Parsnip

Looking for an easy side dish of greens? Of course you are. We all need more greens in our diet, right? At least I do.

Chard is one of my favorite greens to cook because it’s more substantial than spinach (which seems to melt to nothing when you cook it), but more tender and less bitter than kale.

Usually I just sauté chopped chard in olive oil with some garlic. This time I peeled a parsnip down to its tough core and tossed the parsnips ribbons in with the chard.

Continue reading “Sautéed Chard with Parsnip” »