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Search resuls for: "Millie Peartree"


2 mentions found


Sweet Tea-Brined Roast Chicken for Sunday Supper
  + stars: | 2024-05-05 | by ( Sam Sifton | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
I made sweet tea and drank it over an enormous amount of ice, on the stoop, marveling at how sometimes sweet tea is the best tea, even if you usually drink tea straight, no sugar, with not even a lemon to counter the tannins. Sweet tea is reckless tea, unhealthy tea, a liquid candy bar, not something to drink every day. But it has its place, and I made enough of it so I could use the leftovers as a brine for Millie Peartree’s luscious roast chicken (above). Combine the tea with a big handful of Cajun seasoning and marinate chicken legs in it all day. Baste with the juices and serve with baked sweet potatoes, oh my.
Persons: Millie Peartree’s, It’s
Plush, Perfumed Pepperpot
  + stars: | 2024-01-28 | by ( Sam Sifton | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Two or three clicks on the laptop and the mail carrier soon brought me a few pounds of the Provel cheese necessary to make it. Today’s shopping: cassareep, a Guyanese syrup of boiled cassava root, savory-sweet, like a cross between molasses and Worcestershire sauce. It’s a crucial ingredient in one of Guyana’s most beloved dishes, pepperpot (above), which Millie Peartree brought to New York Times Cooking this week. Of course you can buy cassareep online, but if there’s a Caribbean market where you are, it’s most likely stocked there as well. Browned into beef chuck, it makes for a lovely stew: spicy, fragrant, slightly sweet and sticky.
Persons: Louis, Millie Peartree, there’s Organizations: The New York Times, Lambert, New York Times Locations: Guyanese, Worcestershire, Caribbean
Total: 2