American cuisine

American cuisine - quick and easy recipes - page 3

156 recipes

Have a look at these recipes! These are our recipes from the category American cuisine – suitable for various occasions. One of these 156 recipes may become your new favorite. The preparation time is 2 - 600 minutes, depending on the complexity of the recipe. If we’re talking about good recipes, then these favorites come to mind - Cheesecake Recipe Easy, Easy cheesecake recipe, Simple homemade Lemonade Scones, Best Homemade Meatloaf. Will you try one out?

Tammy
Tammy
Recipe preview How to make S'mores at home
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How to make S'mores at home

A recipe for this easy traditional dessert, without needing a campfire!
Romi
Romi
Recipe preview Authentic Southern Chicken Fried Steak recipe
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Authentic Southern Chicken Fried Steak recipe

This easy recipe teaches how to make the best homemade Chicken Fried Steak, an authentic dish of Southern cuisine. Don't miss it!
Romi
Romi
Recipe preview How to make "Carne asada fries" at home?
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How to make "Carne asada fries" at home?

"Carne asada fries" is a popular dish in Mexican-American cuisine. This easy recipe teaches you how to make it at home. Don't miss it!
Tammy
Tammy
Recipe preview Peanut Butter Sauce Ramen Noodles
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Peanut Butter Sauce Ramen Noodles

This untraditional meal has an easy recipe and tastes delicious. Don't be afraid to try, and learn how to make it today!

The Dirty Flower

Pegu Club bartender Kenta Goto’s lovely cocktail La Fleur de Paradis spends its evenings perched atop a weathered zinc bar, sipped by the beautiful people of New York. Our rendition of it using wheat beer instead of champagne is more at home in a plastic cup, enjoyed by folks sporting cut-off shorts and soaking in the sun on a picnic blanket or the open gate of a pickup truck.

Pisco Punch

Knocking back a glass of Pisco Punch is a boozy part of San Francisco’s history. This potent cocktail traces back to the 1890s, when a bartender named Duncan Nicol invented it in SF. This recipe, adapted from San Francisco bartender and Small Hand Foods proprietor Jennifer Colliau, is an easy three-ingredient drink to mix: Simply shake pisco, lemon juice, and pineapple gum syrup together and serve with a pineapple wedge if you’re feeling fancy.

Black Metal Manhattan

CHOW’s former food editor Aida Mollenkamp turned me on to the Black Manhattan, a variation on the traditional whiskey and sweet vermouth drink made with amaro, which she first discovered at San Francisco’s Alembic. In this version, I throw back in a little of the sweet vermouth, as well as a touch of deep, dark nocino, an Italian green walnut liqueur, which gives the whole drink a smooth, nutty finish. Don’t forget, this recipe makes enough to serve you and a friend!

Yellow Bicycle

Deep in the heart of San Francisco’s gritty Tenderloin neighborhood is the creative bar Rye. When a few folks from the CHOW staff made a trip there, they fell in love with this light, bubbly cocktail made with elderflower liqueur, Yellow Chartreuse, and Prosecco.

Kumquat Caipirinha

Angèle in Northern California’s Napa Valley is where locals go for satisfying French fare, but the restaurant’s creative cocktails.

The Flying Fig

Abigail Gullo, head bar chef at SoBou restaurant in New Orleans, celebrates the flavor of ripe figs by muddling them with elderflower liqueur and shaking them in a cocktail shaker with vodka, lots of lemon juice, and agave nectar. This floral, sweet-tart drink is a refreshing way to enjoy fresh figs.

Lombard Street Cocktail

Trick Dog is a bar in the Mission District of San Francisco that’s known for its expertly crafted cocktails. The Lombard Street cocktail was named after one of the city’s most famous, and windiest, landmarks. The smokiness of the mezcal, paired with the sweet and sour flavors of the pineapple syrup, sherry, and lime juice, makes this a well-balanced drink that’ll give you a much-needed taste of the tropics on a chilly evening.

Manhattan Cocktail

Proportions for the classic Manhattan are two (sometimes three) parts whiskey to one part sweet vermouth, with a little aromatic boost from bitters. The drink is believed to date from 1874, created by a bartender at New York’s Manhattan Club. “Since New York was a rye town in those days,” writes cocktail expert Dale DeGroff in The Craft of the Cocktail, “the original Manhattan was made with rye whiskey.” Bourbon Manhattans are a thing in the South.

Perfect Martini

Classic, elegant, and stiff, the martini is a simple fusion of gin and dry vermouth, stirred together with ice, and strained into a chilled glass. The main variables are the proportion of gin to vermouth, and what you choose to garnish with. This recipe uses a 2-to-1 for the former, though 4-to-1, even 5-to-1, is popular. For some, washing the martini glass with dry vermouth, then dumping the vermouth in the sink before stirring straight gin with ice, is just right.

Cranberry-Apple Shrub

Shrubs, a.k.a. drinking vinegars, were popular in Colonial America. At their most basic, shrubs are infusions of fruit in vinegar, sweetened to soften the tart edges. This one combines two quintessentially autumnal fruits—apples and cranberries—in a shrub that can be used as the base for various celebratory drinks. Game plan: Use this to make a refreshing, nonalcoholic Cranberry Shrub Spritz. For something stiffer, try a Rum-Cranberry Shrub Cocktail.

Americano Cocktail

A recipe for what we call the Americano goes as far back as 1861, when it was served at Gaspare Campari’s bar in Milan, says cocktail author Rob Chirico. During Prohibition the drink found favor with booze-deprived tourists from the U.S. and became known as the Americano or American Highball.
Romi
Romi
Recipe preview How to make homemade noodle cups?
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How to make homemade noodle cups?

This easy recipe teaches how to make the best homemade noodle cups. Don't miss it!
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