Dried Fruit
Panettone Bread and Butter Pudding
This bread and butter pudding gets its Italian flavor from panettone, a Milanese egg bread studded with raisins and candied fruit. Long a Christmastime specialty, panettone is becoming increasingly available throughout the year not only in Italy but also in the United States.
Note: Panettone can be found in some Italian markets and specialty foods shops.
Irish Soda Bread
A perennial favorite on both sides of the Atlantic, this raisiny bread makes fine, fragrant toast.
Apple and Pork Stuffing
This recipe originally accompanied Crown Roast of Pork with Apple and Pork Stuffing and Cider Gravy .
Part of the terrific stuffing is used to fill the crown roast of pork, and the rest is baked alongside. But if you are making the stuffing to go with other meats, simply bake all of it in a shallow baking dish until a meat thermometer registers 155°F.
Almond-Raisin Granola
"When we visit our daughter at Amherst College in Massachusetts, my husband and I stay at The Lord Jeffery Inn," says Caroline I. Cameron of Washington, D.C.."The granola at breakfast is terrific. I would be grateful if you could get the recipe from their chef so that I can surprise my husband by making the granola at home."
This granola can also be enjoyed as a snack with the addition of chocolate chips. You could sprinkle it over ice cream, too.
Dried Cherry and Golden Raisin Turnovers
These turnovers could be served for breakfast, with coffee and juice, or for dessert.
Chocolate-Chunk Cookies with Pecans, Dried Apricots, and Tart Cherries
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Aunt Lisl's Butter Cookies
When I was a little girl, my Aunt Lisl always made butter cookies at Hanukkah time. We decorated them. The cookies were stored in her garage in airtight containers. Sometimes we got to take some of them home. Other times, we just nibbled on them at her house.
One of the best things about cooking with relatives is that it's a great time to ask for family stories. While we baked, Aunt Lisl told wonderful tales of my father's boyhood in Germany.
Stuffed Grape Leaves with Merguez Sausage
While this recipe isn't terribly difficult, it is labor-intensive. We recommend you break it up into a couple of steps: Make the filling, then enlist a friend or two to help you do the rolling the following day.
Apricot and Walnut Varenikis
Ukrainian Dessert Dumplings
These stuffed dessert dumplings with a chewy noodle-dough wrapping are a Ukrainian specialty. The fruit fillings vary widely—ours are stuffed with dried apricots and walnuts, then sprinkled with a cinnamon-crumb topping.
Cranberry-Chipotle Fruit Conserve
Serve with: Roast turkey, ham, or chicken. Combine with: Crackers that have been spread with cream cheese or goat cheese. Use as: A sandwich spread.
Caraway Currant Scones
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
Steamed Pumpkin Bread with Walnuts and Dates
Ken Haedrich, cookbook author, says, "Since moving to New England nearly twenty years ago, I've heated the house with wood-burning stoves. And because our big Thanksgiving gatherings put oven space at a premium, I've often pressed those stoves into backup duty. That's how steamed breads—which can be cooked on top of the stoves — came to be a regular part of our feast. This steamed pumpkin bread provides another way to bring good pumpkin flavor to the meal, too.
I also serve my special crescent rolls on the big day. One year, my kids let it be known that they wanted croissants on Thanksgiving, but that seemed like a bit more work than I could handle. Instead, I came up with these sesame crescents—croissant-like rolls with savory onion filling. I guess they did the trick, because nobody says much about croissants anymore. Plus, I can make the crescent rolls two weeks ahead and freeze them. That way, they don't take up any of that precious oven space."
Note that this bread needs to cook in an empty 28-ounce food can (such as the kind used to hold whole tomatoes).
Cumin-Crusted Lamb with Apricots
These flavors and aromas transport me to Marrakesh, where our friend Latif, son of the late imam of the great mosque there, guided us through the bustling and mysterious spice markets. Here's how I've recaptured the memory: a boned leg of lamb is stuffed with intensely flavored dried apricots, high in beta-carotene and potassium, then rubbed with aromatic cumin. Buy your cumin from a Middle Eastern market or spice store for the most flavorful results.