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chicken kiwi and mango salad
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Presented by Campbell's | Easy weeknight dinner alert! Campbell's Tomato Soup pulls together garam masala, ginger, and Basmati rice in this tasty curry.

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In this edition of Street Eats chef Lucas Sin is in Bangkok, Thailand to try sticky, spicy dressed santol at a legendary fruit stand serving the most elaborate fruit dishes the city has to offer.

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No time to cook? We've got you covered. With 10 basic pantry items and 15 express line ingredients, you can make a week's worth of quick dinners with very little time. This crispy thai chicken salad is a healthy way to end your work day with very little effort. http://weightloss-tricks.today/recipe/crispy-thai-chicken-salad

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Produced by Bon Appétit for Colavita | This flavorful chicken and bread salad featuring Colavita® Olive Oil will become your new go-to dinner. It has everything you're craving and it's easy to make.

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Presented by ANA | This light yet filling Green Tea Soba Noodle Salad brings a lot of flavor to the table. Miso-roasted tomatoes, marinated enoki mushrooms, and soy-marinated egg make this traditional Japanese dish one of a kind.

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Join Andy Baraghani as he makes tuna salad with crispy chickpeas. Tuna salad deserves more than to be dolloped on dressed greens for lunch. Some pan-fried chickpeas and the crunch from endive improve things tremendously.

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Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi of London's Ottolenghi restaurant make saffron chicken salad.

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Try our raw and roasted chopped salad recipe!

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Although we're pretty partial to this particular salad, the combo of crunchy veg + lettuce + creamy cheese + pulled protein + crispy topping is universally delicious. Make it your own by swapping in your favorite cheese or any leftover protein, or go ahead and use the all-purpose vinaigrette on just about any salad you can dream up.

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Join Melissa Miranda as she makes Chicken Afritada. This tomato-based Filipino stew marries hearty vegetables, peas, and olives with tender chicken thighs. To amplify the flavors and keep the chicken skin crispy, Melissa roasts the chicken separately from the veg, reuniting them just before plating.
INGREDIENTS
For the chicken:
1 carrot, finely chopped
1 celery stalk, finely chopped
½ large yellow onion, finely chopped
1 red bell pepper, finely chopped
5 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
2 Tbsp. olive oil
4-6 skin-on, bone-in chicken thighs (about 2 lb.)
1 cup chicken stock
1 14.5-oz. can diced tomatoes
3 bay leaves
1 Tbsp. soy sauce
1 Tbsp. fish sauce
Johnny’s seasoning salt
For the roasted vegetables:
4 small carrots, roll cut
8 oz. heirloom potatoes, quartered
2 medium red bell pepper, seeded, cut into bite size pieces
½ cup olive oil
Johnny’s seasoning salt
To finish:
½ cup frozen green peas
¼ cup Castelvetrano olives, pitted
¼ cup Kalamata olives, pitted
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VIDEO BREAKDOWN
0:57 Prep soffritto
2:47 Brown chicken
3:24 Cook soffritto
3:39 Make sauce
4:44 Roast chicken at 425° until done, about 45 minutes
4:56 Prep veg for stew
5:50 Roast veg at 425°, about 10 minutes for peppers, 20 minutes for potatoes and carrots
7:48 Remove chicken
8:15 Add peas, olives
8:35 Add roasted veg, chicken to stew
8:59 Plating
9:43 Tasting

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Today, Bon Appétit meets chefs Lucas Sin and Eric Sze just outside Taipei to taste some of Taiwan’s best clay-oven-roasted chicken. Using a time-honored vertical spit roasting technique and only a simple salt seasoning, these chickens are slowly cooked to achieve that perfect golden crisp. The result? Juicy, flavorful chicken with irresistibly crispy skin, served whole and ready to be devoured with your hands.

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Today, Bon Appétit joins chefs Lucas Sin and Eric Sze in Keelung as they eat their way through an iconic Taiwanese night market for only $18. From specialty pork trotters to charcoal oyster omelets, you can easily indulge in an epic feast on a budget at Taiwan’s night markets.

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Every gathering needs a salad moment, but that doesn't mean you have to make standard leafy dish. Contributing Editor Alison Roman likes to throw together a colorful cross between a salad and a slaw that has watercress, radishes, apple, and lemon.

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Join chef Sophia Roe as she makes curry cauliflower rice. For distinct bits of cauliflower that won’t turn into mush once they’re cooked, don’t overcrowd the bowl of your food processor. Doctor up your cauliflower rice with toasted pine nuts or almonds, dates or dried currants, lots of fresh herbs, unsweetened coconut flakes, or chopped fresh chile.
Find this Healthyish weeknight recipe and more in the December/January issue of Bon Appétit: https://bonappetit.com/story/sophia-roe-recipes

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Shave the cauliflower for this salad recipe within an hour of serving so that it won’t have time to discolor, and make quick work of that task by using a mandoline.

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Today, Bon Appétit meets Chef Lucas Sin in Hong Kong to try Bamboo-pressed Noodles. These noodles are rare and an iconic part of Hong Kong’s street food legacy, with only a handful of places still making them the traditional way by hand. Using nothing but eggs and flour, these springy noodles are pressed with a 40-year-old bamboo pole and then transformed into the perfect bowl of wonton noodle soup.

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Warm up the weekend with our chicken and rice soup recipe.

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Feeling inspired? Try our chicken schnitzel with raw salad recipe.

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Try this easy cauliflower dish for a quick dinner at home.

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Produced by Bon Appétit with Swanson® | Join Sohla El-Waylly as she makes Turkey Tikka Masala. A melody of rich spices, ginger and garlic simmered in Swanson® Chicken Broth bring big flavor to turkey. Pairs perfectly with rice, yogurt and fresh, crunchy veggies.

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Produced by Bon Appétit with Campbell's® | Whip up this easy one-pan chilaquiles recipe for entertaining a crowd or for a crunchy, savory weekend breakfast. Jalapeños, lime and onion set the foundation for a slow cooked version that's brought together with ease thanks to Campbell's® Tomato Soup. We top ours off with avocado, jalapeño, queso fresco, and fresh cilantro for a final punch of fresh flavor.

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We're all about taking shortcuts when it comes to weeknight cooking, but there's no way around using tamarind in pad Thai. The dish is simply a shadow of its former self without it, so look for tamarind paste or concentrate at Asian markets. Once you've got the base down, though, Pad Thai is a great way to use up leftover protein like cooked shrimp or shredded rotisserie chicken (hint: just toss them in with the noodles).
Get the recipe: Pad Thai
Get the recipe: Pad Thai

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Produced by Bon Appétit with Swanson® | Crunchy veggies and rice noodles bring texture to this soup that brings big flavors from Swanson® Chicken Broth, sauteed shallot, browned sausage and coconut milk. Plus, look at all those pretty colors.