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Enjoy Unlimited Cooking Couese

Have a look at some of our favorite courses.

Cooking Couese

Savory Cooking with Fruit

Fresh and dried fruit can be sweet or tart, tangy or citrusy, mild or bitter. We eat them out of hand, bake them into pies, and even toss them into salads. But have you ever cooked them as part of a savory dish? In this course, we’ll look at different fruits and how cooking them transforms their flavor and texture into complex sauces and complements for a variety of proteins —from meat to poultry to fish. You've probably had pork with apples before, but how about salmon with pomegranate? Chicken with figs? Incorporating fruit into savory dishes will open up a whole new world of combinations. You’ll learn how to create layers of flavor by using different forms of fruit—from fresh or dried fruit and juice to fruit butters and syrups.

Cooking Couese

Tomatoes 101

In this course, you will learn the basics of how to shop for tomatoes and how to prepare tomatoes for cooking, canning and preserving, and all sorts of recipes. We'll show you how to make the most of this summer vegetable in our Best Summer Tomato Gratin, Tomato and Burrata Salad with Pangrattato and Basil, and Spicy Tomato Jam.

Cooking Couese

Brown Soda Bread

Robust, moist, and permeated with a delicious wheaty sweetness, Irish soda bread is easy to like, very easy to make, and—unlike yeast breads—doesn’t require much waiting around. Traditionally, this bread adds coarse, whole-wheat flour to all-purpose flour and is often called “brown bread.” In contrast, American-style soda breads often are made solely with all-purpose flour, more sugar, and eggs. We prefer the original brown bread—which has nutty, savory flavor that makes it appropriate to serve with a meal. And since this bread requires just 10 minutes to prepare, it’s something you can add to the dinner table often. Learn every step to our easy Brown Soda Bread recipe in this online cooking class.

Cooking Couese

Chocolate-Espresso Dacquoise

This showstopper of a chocolate dessert is all sleek planes and clean right angles, elegantly enrobed in glossy dark chocolate studded with toasted nuts. Slicing it reveals a layered interior of light, nutty meringue sandwiched with silky buttercream. The problem is that it’s also a project piece, so you rarely see it in home kitchens. Our dacquoise is not just easier than a professional-bakery version—it’s better.

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