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Roti Pizza (aka Whole Wheat Tortilla Pizza with Cheddar and Cilantro Chutney)
Every once in a while I come across a recipe that feels as familiar as if I’ve been eating it my whole life. These roti pizzas (which I usually make on whole wheat tortillas) from Priya Krishna’s cookbook Indian-ish, combine the types of food I loved as a teenager, a mixture of grilled cheese sandwiches and Indian food from Rajun Cajun, the best (and only) Indian takeout spot in Hyde Park. These pizzas – with the brightness of red onion, the saltiness of sharp cheddar cheese, and the tang and spice of cilantro chutney – bring together my favorite childhood flavors in a weekday work-from-home lunch (or dinner or snack).
One underrated ingredient in this – and most – recipes is salt. Salt is fascinating, such a minor but important ingredient in all food. It is key to everything we eat, yet we rarely think about it. It not only gives food its own salty flavor, but it also brings out the flavor in other ingredients. James Beard once asked: “Where would we be without salt?” To which Samin Nosrat answered: “Adrift in a sea of blandness.”
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Spicy Sweet Potato and Broccoli Rice Bowl
I love recipes that are adaptable – that can be made with whatever vegetables you have at home, that can be baked or pan-fried depending on your mood, and that always end up tasting delicious – even when you set off the smoke alarm while cooking. I now bake the vegetables, which is (1) easier, and (2) hasn’t yet set off a smoke alarm.
This recipe is from East, author Meera Sodha’s amazing collection of flavorful vegetarian recipes. (Check out her column in The Guardian for more great recipes.) I’m obsessed with this cookbook – as many people who I’ve evangelized about it to know. Every recipe is tasty and flavorful, but also simple, with never more than a dozen ingredients. It’s vegetarian food that never makes you feel like you’re missing meat.