Nut
Chocolate, Almond, and Banana Parfaits
This super-quick dessert can be served right away, or covered and chilled for up to four hours. (If you're making the parfaits ahead, let stand at room temperature one hour before serving.) Mascarpone (Italian cream cheese) is sold at many supermarkets and at Italian markets.
Spicy Popcorn With Piment d'Espelette and Marcona Almonds
This spicy upscale popcorn combines two international ingredients: ground French peppers and Spanish almonds.
Milk Chocolate-Caramel Tart with Hazelnuts and Espresso
This delicious tart has a buttery shortbread crust, a rich hazelnut-caramel filling, a creamy espresso-chocolate topping, and a sprinkling of crunchy cacao nibs (pieces of roasted cacao beans).
Milk Chocolate Soufflés with Nougat Whip
The centers of these soufflés are soft and mousse-like. The topping takes its flavor cues (honey, nuts) from nougat candy.
Cream Tart with Oranges, Honey, and Toasted-Almond Crust
This simple tart has a creamy filling and an easy press-in crust.
Lamb Khorma
Lamb khorma is sensuous curry made by simmering lamb with yogurt and cream and thickening the sauce with a cashew paste. If you can find goat's milk yogurt or sheep's milk yogurt, it will make a discernable difference in this dish.
Baked Halibut with Almonds
A flavorful dish from the Kripalu Center for Yoga & Health in Massachusetts.
Apricot Linzertorte with Quark Whipped Cream
For more on assembling the torte, see "Prep School."
Quick Sautéed Kale with Toasted Pine Nuts
Don't be concerned about the amount of kale called for in this recipe. The leaves will cook down considerably in the pan.
Red Cabbage Salad with Green Apple, Lingonberry Preserves, and Toasted Walnuts
This seasonal salad is a great mix of colors and flavors.
Fruit and Oat Muesli
This breakfast dish is served at Canyon Ranch Hotel & Spa in Miami Beach.
Chocolate-Nut Tart with Dried Fruit
Chop your favorite nuts and dried fruit to fill this tart. If desired, use toasted coconut or chopped crystallized ginger instead of toffee bits for the garnish.
Pear, Almond, and Dried-Cherry Brown Betty
Brown Betty recipes started showing up in the late 1800s, although nobody is sure who "Betty" was. Traditionally, a brown Betty is made with apples, breadcrumbs, and spices. In this updated version, pears stand in for the apples and the breadcrumbs are enriched with almonds. Keep in mind that this dessert is best eaten the day it's made (but any leftovers would be nice for breakfast).
Butterscotch Pecan Tart with Scotch-Spiked Whipped Cream
This delicious treat is a cross between butterscotch pudding and pecan pie.
Coconut-and-Almond Candy
The killer combination of coconut, almonds, and milk chocolate makes for a delectable candy bar. One of the most iconic of American candies, the Almond Joy, is famous for its creamy coconut filling topped with almonds and covered in milk chocolate. Its sibling, the Mounds bar, has the same coconut center but no almonds. Although the recipes for these two candies are top secret, it's possible to make wonderfully coconutty chocolate candies in your own home.
History: The Almond Joy was invented in 1946 by the Peter Paul Candy Manufacturing Company in Connecticut. The Mounds bar was the original version of the candy, premiering in 1921. Peter Paul used the unusual strategy of creating two very similar candies and advertising them as competing versions, encouraging consumers to pick a favorite. This tactic worked: Almond Joy and Mounds became two of the best-selling candies in the 1920s.
Serving Suggestions: Trick-or-treaters will be delighted to find these candies in the Halloween candy bag. Wrap them in foil or place them in candy cups.
Candy-Making Notes: You can eliminate the almonds and cover the coconut centers with dark chocolate. Better yet, make both versions and give your guests a pleasant dilemna of which to choose.