Spaghetti with Fresh Corn and Slow-Roasted Tomatoes

This pasta makes use of our summer bounty of cherry tomatoes.  We slow-roast them then add to creamy sun-dried tomato pesto sauce and toss with summer corn, noodles and fresh basil.  The sweet corn lends a pleasant and unexpected crunch.  The roasted tomatoes—rich, concentrated flavor in each bite.  Feel free to substitute frozen corn for the fresh, and uncooked cherry tomatoes (halved) for the slow-roasted ones.

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Antipasto Ease

I love a dish that’s simple to prepare, yet presents with such elegance everyone assumes you’ve toiled all afternoon in the kitchen.  The sort of culinary sleight of hand that leaves a cook quietly smiling, as diners gush with equal amounts of enthusiasm and incredulity. Having a few such tricks tucked away in your recipe box will save you in a pinch.

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Green Beans with Tomatoes and Garlic

These beans are a cinch to make yet they’re loaded with complex flavor.  The tomatoes, onions and garlic cook down slowly, together in the pan, while the beans steam on top.  You may be tempted to stop cooking before the beans turn olive green.  Resist.  Crisp, bright-colored, barely-cooked beans aren’t the only way to go.  So keep on cooking, you’ll be rewarded if you do.

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Pasta with Pesto, Potatoes and Green Beans

A bottled jar each of basil pesto and roasted peppers turns this dish into an easy weeknight meal.  But if you feel inclined, it’s always better to make your own.  Roasting peppers is as simple as lightly coating seeded bell pepper halves with olive oil and cooking skin-side down at 400 degrees for 30 minutes.  If you want, place the roasted peppers into a covered bowl for 10 minutes to steam, then remove the skins.  Otherwise, just chop, with the skins on.

The combination of ingredients here is easy to love—a bowl full of pure comfort.   That just happens to make use of summer’s finest produce.

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Salad-e Shirazi — Persian Tomato and Cucumber Salad

Named for the ancient Persian city of Shiraz—reknown for it’s connection to wine, poetry and flowers—this simple salad is best at the height of summer when juicy tomatoes and crisp cucumbers abound.  Persian cucumbers are delicate with few seeds.  If your cucumbers have larger seeds, just scoop them out with a spoon and use the remaining flesh.  Peeling is not necessary if you’re using organic fruit—much of the nutritional content is concentrated in the skin and seeds.

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