© Helen Rosner / Bonnier
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Asparagus is one of the spring season's most celebrated vegetables.
Asparagus is one of the spring season's most celebrated vegetables.
A dozen things to eat and see in Maui, from globally-influenced dining at Amasia to a hundred-year-old bakery and off-the-tourist-beat ramen.
A dozen things to eat and see in Maui, from globally-influenced dining at Amasia to a hundred-year-old bakery and off-the-tourist-beat ramen.
The curious soul of San Francisco's steam beer -- brilliantly clear, deep amber in color, and capped by a bone-white head of foam.
The curious soul of San Francisco's steam beer -- brilliantly clear, deep amber in color, and capped by a bone-white head of foam.
The humble, hearty oat deserves a closer look.
The humble, hearty oat deserves a closer look.
Garlic has an almost mystical quality.
Garlic has an almost mystical quality.
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Check here for the full archive of recipe collections.
Check here for the full archive of recipe collections.
Stuffed with meats, veggies or cheeses, savory pies are a favorite on kitchen tables around the world. Dig in and check out this variety of recipes.
Stuffed with meats, veggies or cheeses, savory pies are a favorite on kitchen tables around the world. Dig in and check out this variety of recipes.
Check out this collection of ways to use graham crackers, a snack time favorite and classic ingredient in desserts.
Shake up some of your favorite St. Patrick's Day ingredients with a twist on tradition. Click through for recipes featuring corned beef, cabbage and potatoes.
From chocolate to red velvet to lemon, there are few things as inviting as a homemade cake. Check out this variety of recipes.
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Try these Ingredient Substitutions when you're in a bind!
Try these Ingredient Substitutions when you're in a bind!
Simple solutions for healthier cooking.
Substituting a few siple ingredients in your recipes will go a long way to making them - and you - significantly more healthy!
A pinch of this, a dab of that... click here for a printable conversion chart. Keep this posted on your refrigerator for easy reference!
Money Saving Ideas
Money saving ideas to bet on.
What are your favorite things to cook your family? Once you have submitted your recipe, we'll post it online with your name and state for everyone to see.
By Helen Rosner

I've never really been a fan of breakfast foods.
I find that people who are breakfast-eaters absolutely cannot fathom the possibility that I don't share their enthusiasm for Belgian waffles, veggie omelets, bowls of cereal, and stacks of flapjacks.
Over the years I've tried to isolate what drives my distaste for American breakfast (a maple aversion? Carb avoidance?), but I can't seem to find one single thread. It's just not the meal for me.
This morning, I faced the enemy at a breakfast thrown by W Hotels at which Jack Yoss, chef de cuisine at the brand's Bali property, was in charge of the menu. At most breakfast events, I find myself facing down a continental spread that couldn't be less exciting: leaden scones, gooey buns, listless fruit salad. But for this party, Yoss went with a concept seemingly tailor-made for me: breakfast canapés.
For the traditional breakfast-eaters, there were mini frittatas and single squares of waffle filled with peach compote. For me, there was an entry point into luxury breakfast heaven: bite-size banh mi, cups of truffle-spiked congee, and mugs of briny, creamy oyster bisque.
And then I saw the deviled eggs, and I realized I'd found the answer.
It's not that I don't like breakfast eggs — faced with no other choice, they're the subcategory of morning food I'm most likely to enjoy — but I love deviled eggs. The contrast of a creamy, savory yolk mixture against the cool neutrality of the white hits me in exactly the right way.
As a breakfast food, they're ideal: they're surprisingly easy to make for one (just keep a baggie of yolk mixture in the fridge, the halved whites in a separate container, and fill the eggs to order), and they won't provoke the outraged "How can you eat that?!" reaction that I get from the breakfast-food partisans when I start my day with spaghetti in red sauce or leftover chicken curry.
In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if some of the die-harders drop their waffle allegiance and ask me for a bite.
Any version of deviled eggs would work for breakfast, but these are particularly well-suited for the morning: