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Fruit

Honey-Caramel Tart with Apricots and Almonds

Semolina flour gives extra texture to the crust.

Brown Sugar Apple Pastries

Frozen puff pastry makes an instant crust for sautéed apples.

Fresh Strawberry Sorbet with Shortbread Cookies

The perfect ending to a springtime brunch. Use the best strawberries you can find for that "real berry" flavor.

Mom's Blender Chocolate Mousse with Lemon Cream

This recipe is based on one from senior food editor Sarah Tenaglia's mom.

Dried Fruit and Almond Haroseth

Haroseth, a fruit and nut condiment, is one of the six elements on the seder plate at Passover. It is traditionally eaten on matzo and symbolizes the mortar that was used to build the pyramids.

Pot Roast with Orange and Dates

This recipe calls for two small roasts instead of one big one. They are easier to cook, and make for prettier slices.

Sauteed Baby Beets with Haricots Verts and Lemon

Baby beets, which are roughly the size of a large marble, are sweeter than mature beets and cook more quickly.

Lemon Meringue Ice Cream Pie in Toasted Pecan Crust

This dessert has it all — a pecan crust is filled with a layer of vanilla ice cream, topped with lemon curd, and then frozen. And the finishing touch? A golden brown crown of meringue.

Frozen Meringue Cake with Seasonal Berries

Editor's note: This recipe is adapted from chef Paul Flynn of The Tannery in Dungarvan, Ireland. This dish is Flynn's contemporary take on a classic English dessert called Eton Mess. Traditionally, the recipe calls for whipped cream and crumbled meringues to be chilled together, then topped with fresh fruit. Flynn's twist is to freeze the meringue and cream base, making it a cooler contrast for the juicy berries. If time is short, feel free to substitute store-bought meringues rather than making them from scratch. Use eight 2-inch shells. Begin preparing this recipe one day ahead.

Venison Medallions with Juniper and Orange

Editor's note: This recipe is adapted from chef Paul Flynn of The Tannery in Dungarvan, Ireland. Once widely eaten, game lost its popularity in Ireland in modern times, as palates became unaccustomed to its distinct flavors. But smart breeders of venison are now creating meat with a milder and more mainstream taste without losing any of the noble game's intrinsic qualities. Irish chefs are happy to pay their tribute. At The Tannery, the garlic used in this recipe is wild, gathered from nearby hedgerows. Irish butter, with its high fat content, will add a particularly rich flavor, but regular American butter can be substituted.

Seared Salmon with Raisin and Caper Butter

Editor's note: This recipe is adapted from chef Paul Flynn of The Tannery in Dungarvan, Ireland. Wild salmon, once so plentiful in Ireland that domestic servants could stipulate in their contracts that they should not have to eat it more than three times per week, has now become a luxury item on both sides of the Atlantic. However, when top-notch fish is available, this simple preparation is a great way to showcase it. The compound butter, with its use of raisins, harks back to the dried fruits popular in the Middle Ages, and the capers show the fondness of contemporary Irish cooks for Mediterranean flavors. Irish butter, with its high fat content, will add a particularly rich flavor, but regular American butter can be substituted.

Quick Preserved Lemon Zest

Editor's note: The recipe below is from Govind Armstrong's Small Bites, Big Nights.

Santa Barbara Spot Prawns in Pernod

>Editor's note: The recipe below is from Govind Armstrong's Small Bites, Big Nights and is part of a special menu he created for Epicurious's Wine.Dine.Donate program.

Citrus "Jell-O" with Honey and Mint

Editor's note: The recipe below is from Mark Bittman's Quick and Easy Recipes from The New York Times.

Orange Flourless Chocolate Cake for the Reagan Family

Editor's note: The recipe below is taken from All the Presidents' Pastries: Twenty-Five Years in the White House by Roland Mesnier with Christian Malard.

Banana Rum Cream Pie

This voluptuous rum-spiked pie will surprise you with its complexity—a hint of curry powder adds an elusive undertone that makes it particularly delicious.
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