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Vegetarian

Instant-Pot Plain Whole Milk Yogurt

If you’ve never made yogurt at home, you’re in for a treat. It’s a rewarding process that gives you an appreciation for the role that bacteria play in our lives—and it yields delicious, versatile yogurt you can enjoy without any additives or artificial ingredients.

Beets With Dill, Lime, and Yogurt

In this colorful dish, sweet beets are zipped up with lime, yogurt, and garlic. If you only have Greek yogurt on hand, thin it down with a little water or milk; you’re looking for a sauce that’s thin enough to drizzle. You can use any kind of beets here. Red and candy cane beets are sweeter than yellow beets, but all work wonderfully well. Or use a combination for the most stunning presentation imaginable.

Hot Chocolate Baked French Toast

Simply put: this is the most indulgent, decadent breakfast you can prep in advance for Christmas morning.

Leche Flan with Grapefruit

For the clearest caramel and smoothest custard, ceramic or glass baking dishes work best for cooking this Filipino-American–style dessert.

Spiced Molasses Cookies

If you’d like an even more pronounced molasses flavor, use a robust instead of mild molasses. Just don’t use blackstrap in these cookies; not only will it be too strong and bitter, but it will overwhelm the spices.

Jam-Filled Challah Doughnuts

If your jam is too thick, a few pulses in a food processor will loosen it up—no need to add water.

Pistachio Thumbprints

You can find pistachio paste at specialty food stores and some grocery stores, but making your own is easy. Process 1/2 cup raw pistachios, 2 Tbsp. honey, and 1 Tbsp. vegetable oil in a food processor to a smooth paste.

Honey-Vanilla Linzer Cookies

You can roll out the dough and punch out other shapes, but the slice-and-bake method is fast, and you won’t have any scraps.

Honey-Vanilla Sablé Cookie Dough

This dough recipe produces a finely textured, surprisingly flavorful cookie that holds its shape well. Use it for our Honey-Vanilla Linzer Cookies and Pistachio Thumbprints.

Hazelnut Lace Sandwich Cookies

Make your dough balls as even as possible so the cookies match up when stacked.

Granola Cluster Cookies

These meringue-like cookies have all our favorite granola ingredients. You can swap in equal amounts of other nuts and seeds, such as hazelnuts, peanuts, or sunflower seeds.

Blood Orange and Poppy Polenta Shortbread

Make these delicate, citrusy, melt-in-your-mouth cookies and just try not to eat all of them in one sitting.

Bittersweet-Chocolate Truffles

Chef Jody Williams serves this truffle mixture family-style at holiday parties, with spoons, so guests can scrape off shavings of ganache and toss them through cocoa powder or sandwich between wedges of clementine.

Salted Buttered Pecans with Orange and Nutmeg

The orange zest and nutmeg say holiday, but you can switch up the spices as long as you keep the butter and salt.

Coconut and Crispy Chickpea Trail Mix

The beauty of this mix is that it can be deployed lots of ways. Eat it out of hand as an upgrade to the usual cocktail nut or pretzel offering, or spoon it over plain yogurt as a savory topping. It can also be tossed into a bowl of salad greens or as a stir-in for a puréed soup.

Frosted Malt-Chocolate Cookies

Original malted milk powder can be found in the baking aisle. Look for the Nestlé Carnation brand.

Curried Lentil, Tomato, and Coconut Soup

Packed with flavor from curry powder and fresh ginger, this fragrant soup is wonderfully filling, but won’t weigh you down.

Quinoa Bowl with Lentils and Mustard Vinaigrette

Yes, you can cook lentils and quinoa together. And now your life will become exponentially easier.

Polenta Cacio e Pepe

No pressure cooker? Cook it the old-fashioned way.

Seared Radicchio and Roasted Beets

Roasting beets over high heat yields charred skin—a nice balance with the sweet flesh.
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