Cassata parfaits
/Cassata is a Sicilian cake full of dried fruit and nuts. This full-flavoured version not only looks outstanding, but is much easier to make.
Recipes, tips and reviews
These recipes are developed, tested and re-tested until perfect. Try one at home tonight.
I used the Japanese Kuri squash which is a fiery red colour. It roasts well. You can use any drier variety of squash for this curry.
The best Scottish shortbread handed down through my family. Crumbly, sweet and buttery.
This dish has a salty, savoury sauce with a little bit of a kick. If you don't want the spice of the jalapenos, leave it out, and finely diced onion can be used instead of the shallots.
This is the one hors d’oeuvre that I keep being asked for time and time again. It’s crunchy, creamy, spicy and hits all the high spots.
Mushrooms and squash have a real affinity and this soup proves it. I like to use oyster mushrooms, but chanterelles, which I found at the supermarket this week, provide the best flavour.
The fifth taste, umami, has much to do with glutamate, an amino acid found in such foods as prosciutto, soy sauce and a number of cheeses. Umami can show up in your glass, too (fermentation is glutamate’s old friend).
When this recipe originally ran in The Globe and Mail, I received a lovely note from reader Barbara Zuchowicz. This dish reminded her of a wonderful meal she had in Italy: "It brought back joyful memories of a trip to Italy my late husband, an exceptional cook, and I took a number of years ago.
Cassata is a Sicilian cake full of dried fruit and nuts. This full-flavoured version not only looks outstanding, but is much easier to make.
This warm potato salad is very versatile. Serve it with Cauliflower with Cheese Crumble as a vegetarian dinner or as a side with grilled chicken, fish or even hamburgers. It is also perfect for a buffet table. If you don’t like feta you can use goat cheese.
Read MoreCeviche is usually fresh raw fish that is "cooked" by marinating in fresh lime juice. My version sears the scallops first to give a slightly different texture and flavour to the dish. Shrimp may be substituted. Do not leave the scallops in the lime juice for more than 4 hours refrigerated, they will overcook.
Read MoreIf only thick stalks of asparagus are available, peel the stalks. Blanch in boiling water for 2 minutes, drain and run under cold water until cold. If you have thin stalks, do not peel them, and blanch for only 1 minute.
Chef Suzanne Goin’s latest book, The A.O.C. Cookbook, features some of her restaurant’s signature dishes like this Tuscan kale salad.
Read MorePan roasting is a simple technique favoured by chefs when cooking meat and poultry because it creates excellent flavours.
Read MoreThis feta will keep up to two weeks refrigerated. Serve at room temperature.
Read MoreMoy House in County Clare is one of the most delightful places to stay in Ireland. Their lemon tart is spectacular.
Read MoreThese are the tastiest empanadas, and pastrami is such a trendy ingredient right now.
Read MoreServe this easy dish over a bed of rice. Substitute any thick white fish you like - striped bass, grouper and black cod are all excellent. I used light coconut milk and it worked beautifully. The sauce can be made up to three days in advance. You can also bake boneless chunks of chicken or shrimp in this sauce. Chicken takes about 20 minutes and shrimp about 8 to 10.
Read MoreMixing Indian curry paste with hoisin makes a spicy, sweet, fragrant sauce perfect with eggplant. Use the long Japanese eggplant for this. They are not bitter. Make ahead of time and reheat.
Read MoreLemon Cream with Blueberries
Read MoreA cold salmon that has flavour as well as texture. Roasting the salmon gives a firmer texture than poaching as well as being easier to do.
This salad brims with freshness and snap. If you can't find fennel, use Belgian endive instead.
Read MoreA Mexican take on chicken salad. Serve on a large platter on a bed of greens. Buy some good cornbread and serve with it.
Read MoreA Mediterranean version of chicken soup that uses Israeli couscous instead of the more traditional rice. It is the perfect soup for Rosh Hashanah. Israeli couscous is a tiny round pasta that looks like pearl barley but tastes like pasta.
Warm Sauteed Pepper and Tomato Salad
Read MoreAnchovy bread works well with a platter of hors d'oeuvre as well as alongside steak. Substitute 2 tablespoons of anchovy paste for the anchovies if you prefer.
Read MoreFrench Comte cheese is a melting cheese with a nutty, almost caramelized, taste. Substitute gruyere if necessary.
Read MoreYou can add chopped red onions to this salad.
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© 2018, Lucy Waverman.