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Search resuls for: "Mia Leimkuhler"


5 mentions found


Go Ahead and Double the Greens in These Recipes
  + stars: | 2024-01-16 | by ( Mia Leimkuhler | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Mia here, the newsletter editor for New York Times Cooking, filling in for Emily. I am a grown woman who enjoys eating her vegetables. I say this not as a terrifically awkward introduction, but as a reminder to myself. Which is why I’ve begun seeking out — and cooking on repeat — recipes that welcome increasing their vegetable matter, particularly those good-for-you leafy greens. Am I effortlessly upping the nutritional and virtuous content of my easy dinner?
Persons: Mia, Emily, I’ve Organizations: New York Times
I’m always trying to eat more fish, but fish doesn’t always make it easy. Or the fish I wanted has sold out, and now I have to figure out if my salmon recipe will work with tilapia. Or — the most likely scenario — I just didn’t make it to the fish counter and now need a way to make frozen fillets sing. So I understand why Yewande Komolafe’s coconut fish and tomato bake has over 4,000 reviews and a five-star rating: It’s flexible, forgiving and incredibly flavorful. With that sweet-spicy coconut sauce and plenty of lime to punch everything up, this recipe makes even those frozen fillets taste fantastic.
Persons: I’m, doesn’t, ,
California Rolls for a Crowd
  + stars: | 2023-08-23 | by ( Mia Leimkuhler | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
For years, my party go-to has been Sheldon Simeon’s pan sushi dynamite, a recipe from his excellent cookbook, “Cook Real Hawai’i.” Pan sushi — or sushi bake — never fails to delight. It’s a generous sheet of sushi rice topped with fish that has been baked just long enough to marry with its sauce, placed on the table with palm-size squares of nori for D.I.Y. Naz’s recipe has the same sushi-casserole heart, but with California roll vibes. Imitation crab is mixed with cream cheese, mayo and Sriracha, baked on vinegary sushi rice, showered with furikake and topped with sliced cucumber and avocado. Naz notes that you can use canned tuna or salmon (or, indeed, real crab) instead; I can confidently confirm that sushi bake is a great use of canned salmon.
Persons: I’m, Naz, Sheldon, “ Cook Organizations: New York Times Locations: California, mayo
Crispy Rice, Spicy Tuna, Easy Dinner
  + stars: | 2023-08-16 | by ( Mia Leimkuhler | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Speaking of smashing things (and having rough days) — here’s Hetty Lui McKinnon’s recipe for crispy potato tacos. Also comforting — in that it’s built on a pantry staple and comes together in a half-hour — is Kay Chun’s linguine and clams with fresh red sauce. It’s the base for all sorts of easy desserts and beverages, like blueberry cream Popsicles and no-churn olive oil ice cream, Brazilian lemonade and Thai iced tea. And if I’ve sold you on the virtues of a rice cooker, here’s Wirecutter’s guide to the best rice cookers out there. My Zojirushi model has been going strong for over a decade; it sings “Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star” when it’s done doing its thing.
Persons: , Hetty Lui McKinnon’s, Kay Chun’s, Dee, they’ll, Melissa, I’ve, it’s Organizations: New York Times
A Potato Salad That Packs a Serious Umami Punch
  + stars: | 2023-06-28 | by ( Mia Leimkuhler | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Mia here, filling in for Melissa Clark, who’s on vacation. Why smush potatoes into mayo when you could shingle them with cheese or roast them until crispy? What changed my mind was fish, specifically the realization that smoked salmon, tinned mackerel and — favorite of favorites — salmon roe were perfect partners to lush potato salad. So, of course, I immediately saved Kenji López-Alt’s Japanese potato salad with mentaiko (above) to my recipe box. It’s potato salad, but with umami oomph.
Persons: Mia, Melissa Clark, who’s, Kenji López, umami oomph Locations: mayo
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