Chicken breast with spicy garlic scapes and sweet lime
/This summery meal is flexible so serve it often, replacing the chicken with fish, shrimp or even scallops.
Read MoreRecipes, 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.
This summery meal is flexible so serve it often, replacing the chicken with fish, shrimp or even scallops.
Read MoreBecause planks smoke and steam as they heat up, they improve grilled dishes by giving them a smoky flavour while still retaining moisture. Even better, planking shortens cleanup time dramatically by eliminating messy grates and stuck-on food. Fish is often served on a plank, but chicken with the skin on does well, too.
Read MoreRibs à la Pepper
Read MoreIn Spain, traditional paella is made outside on a wood-burning grill – the paella soaks in the smokiness. Don’t overload your pan, the rice should be the star.
Read MoreOne of my favourite dishes at Birba is the burratawith caponata, a perfect appetizer for this time of year and easy to make at home. In Italian, burrata means “buttered,” an indication of just how decadent this cheese is.
Read MoreA tangle of baby shrimp top this easy chilled soup. Look for ripe avocados that have a little give to them.
Read MoreAlthough charcuterie is a trendy dish in many restaurants, it makes a refreshing main course for a summer dinner. Buy your favourite kinds and serve with this hearty salad dressed with bagna cauda vinaigrette, a tradtional Italian dip for vegetables.
Read MoreAuthentic Moroccan and Tunisian food often involves an intensive amount of prep work (not to mention long cooking times), but this recipe gives you all the flavour without the time commitment. The mix of spices used is enough to lend the dish a heady background, while delicate baby carrots and turnips impart freshness.
Read MoreTreadwell makes a sorbet with fromage frais and a lot of lime. I found it easier to buy a lime sorbet and add a couple of tablespoons of chopped basil or mint to it. The soup is hot, the sorbet cold.
Read MoreVij’s Family Chicken Curry is an easy curry with many layers none of them too spicy. Vij says the richness of the sour cream in this curry, and the particular (but not hot) spicing make it a perfect match for chardonnay.
Read MoreSimple and tasty. Serve it with mashed potatoes and seasonal vegetables or a side salad.
Read MoreA delicate, fruity-tasting relish that is superb with the chicken and doubles easily.
Read MoreServe these brownies for dessert with chocolate sauce and a scoop of maple ice cream, and later as a snack with sifted icing sugar. They are the moist type, not cakey ones, and best slightly under baked.
Read MoreSome time ago, my testers and I came across a decades-old New York Times recipe for a simple fruit-based torte. We made it and then created a version that we all preferred using a slightly different technique: folding melted butter into the base (rather than beating it together with the sugar) to create a type of French sponge called a genoise.
Read MoreKorean gochujang paste, available at Asian stores and some supermarkets, is the new chili paste taking over from Sriracha and SambalOelek. It has a slight sweetness and a consistency like miso, and is a great addition to soups and sauces for both texture and taste.
Read MoreA take on Buffalo wings but meatier. I used Frank’s RedHot (the traditional one) but you can use your favourite hot sauce and spice it up as much as your kids will tolerate.
Read MoreThis salad, made with kid-approved cucumbers, is a different take on the celery and blue-cheese dip that’s usually served with wings.
A kid’s delight. A bit like a Rice Krispies square only much better. This is also great with either dark or milk chocolate.
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© 2018, Lucy Waverman.