Charred Broccolini and cauliflower is served over a warm, garlicky bagna cauda sauce, and finished with pecorino and fried capers in this Italian-inspired winter side or starter.
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Italian cooks know how to treat their vegetables. In the winter, they often serve a hot dipping sauce flavored with anchovies, garlic, olive oil and butter that is a welcome bath for all sorts of raw ...
Nancy Silverton, the James Beard award-winning chef and restaurateur, may be known for her magic touch with bread, pizza, and pastries, but in her cooking class for YesChef — a subscription-based ...
Bagna Cauda is a hot dip that's native to Italy. Unlike many other holiday dips that are built around sour cream, cream cheese and even mascarpone cheese, it contains extra-virgin olive oil, garlic ...
Melt the butter in a small sauce pot. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant and softened. Add the chopped anchovies, olive oil and lemon zest and juice. Cook over medium-low heat until the anchovies ...
If you’ve never sampled bagna cauda, get ready to fall in love. In his cookbook, Milk Street Shorts, culinary icon Christopher Kimball explains the appeal of the Italian favorite: “Made with garlic, ...
Her Business: Talbott & Arding Cheese and Provisions, Hudson, N.Y. What She’s Known For: Scrupulous sourcing. Applying technique acquired in Italy, France and California to Hudson Valley produce. AS ...
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