Andouille Skewers

Andouille Skewers

A Cajun cookout skewer, the kind of thing that comes off the grill at a Louisiana backyard barbecue while the gumbo is finishing on the back burner. You take andouille (the heavily smoked, garlicky Cajun pork sausage) and cut it into thick coins, then thread them onto pre-soaked wooden skewers (or metal) with chunks of red and green pepper, red onion, and a few halved cherry tomatoes. Brush with a quick Cajun glaze of melted butter, garlic, brown sugar, hot sauce and Cajun seasoning. Onto a hot grill over high heat for just long enough to char the vegetables and bring the sausage shiny and sticky. Eaten straight off the skewer with a beer in the other hand, the smoke still hanging in the air.

Snacks 27 minutes Serves8
Balti Masala

Balti Masala

Balti masala is a mild, balanced spice blend designed as the foundation for British-Indian curries. Unlike hot masalas, this blend emphasizes warmth over fire. The whole spices are dry-roasted to develop their individual characters before grinding, creating depth of flavor that pre-ground blends can't match. The cinnamon provides sweetness, coriander seeds contribute earthiness, and cardamom adds aromatics. This is a curry powder that improves with age; it develops better flavor after 1-2 weeks of storage.

Curry Powder 10 minutes Serves200
Broccoli-Bacon Salad

Broccoli-Bacon Salad

Broccoli-bacon salad is a fixture of American potlucks, summer cookouts, and church suppers, especially across the Midwest and South where it earned the affectionate nickname "broccoli crunch". Its origins sit somewhere in 1980s home cooking, when raw vegetable salads bound in creamy dressings became a casserole-era staple, and it has stuck around because the formula is so satisfying. Broccoli is treated like a salad leaf here rather than a hot vegetable, broken into bite-sized florets that stay assertively crunchy and grassy under the dressing. Crisp bacon adds smoke and salt, red onion brings a clean sharpness, sunflower seeds contribute a nutty crunch, and dried cranberries (or raisins, in older versions) drop little pockets of chewy sweetness across the bowl. The dressing is the secret. A glossy emulsion of mayonnaise, cider vinegar, and just enough sugar to round things out, it coats every floret without weighing them down. The salad is genuinely simple to make and improves with a short rest in the fridge, where the broccoli softens just slightly and absorbs the flavours of the dressing. It pairs wonderfully with grilled chicken, pulled pork, hamburgers, or a baked ham. Once you have made it, you understand why every American family seems to claim a version as their own.

Sides 30 minutes Serves6
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