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Tomato and Chickpea Shakshuka

I usually keep a few canned things on hand. Sardines, tuna, and tomatoes, are constants youโ€™ll find in my cupboards. I also have oddities that Iโ€™m not sure what Iโ€™ll use them for, but keep them around anyways, like smoked sugar, butterscotch chips, coffee-flavored salt, Vietnamese coconut syrup, and a kit someone gave me for making queso blanco which does, indeed, work. Iโ€™ve discovered theโ€ฆ

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Pasta Puttanesca

One of my favorite pastas is Pasta Puttanesca. For some reason, I donโ€™t make it very often, because I always seem to be sautรฉing fresh greens in olive oil and garlic, or something like that, to toss with noodles. But I love all the ingredients in Pasta Puttanesca; capers, olives, anchovies, crushed red peppers, and lots of garlic, so when faced with what to makeโ€ฆ

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Caponata

I used to haveย a hard time with certain cooked vegetable salads, such asย ratatouille, even though people have insisted that I would like their version. Which Iโ€™ve always found odd, because if someone told me they didnโ€™t like chocolate (I know โ€“ horrors!), I would not try to sell them on a brownieย or chocolate cake. Ratatouille always tastes likeย a lot of stewed vegetable all mixed up,โ€ฆ

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Meatball Sandwich

I often think how amusing (and sometimes frustrating) how many words there are in the French language that seemingly mean the same thing, but have various subtleties and nuances that make them worlds apart. And thinking about it, I realize that Americans have our own variety of words for seemingly (or exactly) the same thing, many based on where we live. Speaking of which, Iโ€ฆ

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