© Todd Coleman / Bonnier-
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 Carolyn Forché

In late afternoons in high summer, the fields of Whidbey Lavender Farm on Washington State's Whidbey Island give off a purple radiance, and the breeze of Puget Sound lifts the floral scent toward the cedar forest.
So it is no wonder that the women writing poetry and fiction in the cottages of the nearby Hedgebrook writers' retreat come to walk among the lavender when their day's work is finished.
That is how I came, by way of a deer trail, to the fields planted by M.C. and Kay Kang. The couple started their first lavender field in 2005, after falling asleep in a bedroom scented with the just-picked blossoms at a friend's lavender farm in the mainland town of Sequim the previous year.
Along with Sequim, Whidbey Island lies within a rain shadow, a lavender-friendly microclimate protected from too much precipitation by the Olympic Mountains. Most of the Kangs' plants are the fragrant Grosso variety, used for bath oils and perfumes, but they also grow several kinds of English lavender—sweet-smelling, low-camphor plants that are best for cooking.
It was this culinary lavender that interested me as I stole beneath the rafters in the Kangs' cedar drying barn.
Hedgebrook's chefs had befriended the Kangs and were making sorbet and salted cookies flecked with their blossoms, but I soon learned that English lavender has a long history in the kitchen.
Native to the Mediterranean, lavender was, in all likelihood, brought to the British Isles in the second century by the Romans, who used it for washing and bathing, as well as for cooking and winemaking.
A member of the mint family and a relative of thyme, it lends floral and herbal notes to dishes. Today, farmers in France send their lambs to graze among the blooms, and French grandmothers cut lavender from roadsides for their kitchens. I followed suit, adding blossoms to crème brûlée, threading shrimp onto sprigs for the grill, and tossing the sweet dried herb with potatoes for roasting.
The Kangs don't sell their lavender, preferring to give it away, but the nearby Lavender Wind Farm does. I like to hang a bunch of theirs in my kitchen, where its fragrance transports me back to Whidbey Island's fields.
See Recipe For Roasted Potatoes with Lavender »