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
Classic American Potato Salad

Classic American Potato Salad

Few dishes feel as woven into American summer as potato salad. It appears at backyard barbecues, church potlucks, and Fourth of July tables from Maine to Texas, and although every family insists their version is the only correct one, the bones are reassuringly consistent: waxy potatoes, hard-boiled eggs, a generous slick of mayonnaise, and the bright bite of mustard and pickle. The taste is creamy and cool, savoury with a gentle sweet-sour tang, punctuated by crisp celery and the sting of raw onion. It smells faintly of vinegar and paprika, like a 1950s deli counter on a hot afternoon. The texture is the real prize. Potatoes should be tender enough to yield to a fork but still hold their shape, so the salad reads as chunky rather than mashed. Difficulty is low, which is part of its charm. The only real technique is seasoning the warm potatoes so they drink in the vinegar before the mayo goes on, a small step that separates a flat salad from a great one. Make it the day before if you can. A night in the fridge lets the flavours marry, the onion mellow, and the dressing settle into every crevice, which is exactly what you want when you pull it out alongside burgers, pulled pork, or grilled chicken.

Sides 40 minutes Serves6
Deviled Eggs

Deviled Eggs

Deviled eggs are one of America's most enduring party foods, a fixture of Easter brunches, Thanksgiving tables, summer barbecues, and Sunday potlucks from coast to coast. The dish itself is much older than its American identity. Stuffed eggs flavoured with mustard, vinegar, and spices appear in Roman writings and remained popular across medieval Europe, but the term "deviled", meaning seasoned hot and spicy, took hold in eighteenth-century England and crossed the Atlantic with Anglo settlers. By the twentieth century, the American version had crystallised into the formula we recognise today: hard-boiled eggs split lengthwise, yolks scooped out and whipped smooth with mayonnaise, mustard, and a splash of vinegar, then piped or spooned back into the whites and finished with a dusting of paprika. The taste is luxurious in its simplicity. Creamy and rich, with a gentle tang and just enough mustard heat to justify the name, set against the cool, slightly springy bite of the white. Difficulty is genuinely low, but two details lift them from good to memorable: cooking the eggs just enough so the yolks are fully set but never grey-ringed, and seasoning the filling assertively, since cold dulls flavour. They are best made the day they will be eaten, although the eggs themselves can be boiled and peeled a day ahead.

Sides 25 minutes Serves6
Ensaladang Talong (Grilled Eggplant Salad)

Ensaladang Talong (Grilled Eggplant Salad)

Long Asian aubergines char directly over a gas flame or hot grill until blackened all over and totally soft inside (poke through to test, no resistance). Cool for 10 minutes; peel away the charred skin (it slips off if cooked enough). Tear the flesh into 5 cm strips. Dress with diced tomato, thin-sliced red onion, fish sauce, white-cane vinegar and calamansi juice. Rest for 5 minutes to let the eggplant absorb the dressing. Serve room temperature.

Sides 27 minutes Serves4
Green Curry BBQ Aubergine

Green Curry BBQ Aubergine

This is a BBQ side built on the flavour profile of Thai green curry rather than a Thai curry itself. The marinade is essentially a small batch of green curry sauce reduced down until thick and clinging, then cooled and rubbed into wedges of aubergine that sit in it overnight. By morning the cut surfaces have drunk in coconut, paste, fish sauce, palm sugar, lime leaf and basil; by the time they hit the grill, the flesh has half-pickled and the surface is coated in a paste that caramelises beautifully over hot coals. The grill does the rest. Direct high heat blackens the marinade into sticky-black patches while the inside steams under its own glaze and softens to spoon-tender. Difficulty is low. The only patience involved is overnight in the fridge. Serve as a centrepiece on a BBQ platter alongside grilled meats, or as a vegetarian main with sticky rice, a wedge of lime and a scatter of Thai basil. It is rich, smoky, gently sweet, salty and herbaceous all at once, with the unmistakable green-curry note running through every bite.

Sides 37 minutes Serves4
Grilled Corn on the Cob

Grilled Corn on the Cob

Grilled corn on the cob is the unofficial flag of an American summer cookout. Whether it appears alongside ribs in Kansas City, brisket in central Texas, or burgers on a Midwestern back porch, the technique is essentially the same: husk the cob, lay it directly over hot coals or a hard gas flame, and turn it until the kernels darken and pop with sugar caramelisation. The flavour is straightforward but layered. Heat converts the corn's starches and sugars into something almost popcorn-like in aroma, while a slick of garlic butter melts into every crevice and a squeeze of lime cuts cleanly through the richness. Difficulty is low, but the line between perfectly grilled and overcooked is narrow, since corn can dry out quickly once the kernels begin to wrinkle. The trick is high direct heat for a short time, and constant turning so each side picks up colour without burning through. American corn culture has always borrowed generously from its neighbours, and any conversation about grilled corn eventually circles to elote, the Mexican street-food version slathered in mayo, cotija, chilli, and lime. The recipe here keeps to the cleaner butter-and-chive backyard style, but elote is just a brush away in the notes. Serve hot, straight off the grill, with extra butter and napkins, because nobody eats this neatly and nobody minds.

Sides 22 minutes Serves6
Grilled Eggplant Salad

Grilled Eggplant Salad

A juicy room-temperature salad built around the smoky soft flesh of whole-roasted eggplant. The eggplant flavour anchors everything, mildly bitter, deeply smoky if you can blister the skin first, almost meaty in texture once scooped. Around it, finely chopped tomato and cucumber release their water and form a brothy dressing on the bottom of the bowl, sweetened slightly by the addition of a pinch of sugar and sharpened by black rice vinegar (Chinkiang, the malty, dark, slightly sweet variety, not the white-rice kind). Browned garlic in olive oil folds in last and carries the aroma. Easy to make and forgiving; the only step that requires care is roasting the eggplants long enough that the flesh is properly soft. Sits alongside polo or naan as a fresh, juicy counter to the heavier mains of the Uyghur table, and the kind of dish made every day in summer when eggplants are cheap and good in the Kashgar bazaars.

Sides 45 minutes Serves4
Tandoori Broccoli, Cauliflower & Red Onion

Tandoori Broccoli, Cauliflower & Red Onion

These are grilled vegetables with spiced coating, crispy outside, tender inside. Par-cooking prevents the vegetables from drying out on the grill; the gram flour coating becomes golden and fragrant. The yoghurt adds richness and helps the spices cling; the lemon juice adds brightness. This is satisfying enough to serve as a starter or vegetarian main course, yet simple enough for a weeknight side. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Sides 30 minutes Serves4
Tandoori Chicken Tikka

Tandoori Chicken Tikka

Tandoori Chicken Tikka is restaurant-quality barbecue, sophisticated yet accessible. The chicken undergoes a two-stage marinade: first, a quick acid and spice bath to begin tenderizing; second, a rich yoghurt-based marinade infused with warming spices, fresh herbs, and umami-rich Parmesan. The extended marination (up to 48 hours) allows deep flavor penetration and tenderness. The result is succulent, fragrant, lightly charred chicken with a burnished exterior and a creamy, spiced crust. Serve with lemon and fresh coriander.

Sides 5 minutes Serves4
Tandoori King Prawn

Tandoori King Prawn

Tandoori King Prawns are elegant, restaurant-quality appetizers or mains. The prawns undergo two rapid marinades: first, an oil-based bath with garlic, ginger, and turmeric to season quickly; second, a creamy, spiced marinade with yoghurt, cream cheese, and fresh herbs for silky texture and depth. The double approach respects the delicate nature of prawns while ensuring flavor on all sides. The brief cooking (5-8 minutes) preserves succulence. Serve with lemon and herbs. This is luxurious seafood preparation made simple.

Sides 43 minutes Serves4
Three-Bean Salad

Three-Bean Salad

Three-bean salad is one of those quietly enduring American classics that has been served at potlucks, church suppers, and Memorial Day cookouts since at least the 1950s. It rose to ubiquity through community cookbooks and the back of tinned-bean labels, and it has held on because it ticks every potluck virtue: it travels well, gets better as it sits, costs almost nothing, and feeds a crowd without fuss. The flavour is built on contrast. Soft, starchy beans soak up an assertive sweet-sour vinaigrette of cider vinegar, sugar, and oil, while crunchy green beans and the pungent bite of red onion keep the texture lively. There is a sweetness to it that can surprise first-timers, but that gentle candy-vinegar note is exactly the point. It is what defines this salad and what makes it sing alongside grilled meats, fried chicken, hot dogs, and barbecue. Difficulty is minimal, which is part of its old-fashioned charm. The only rules are to use good tinned pulses, rinse them thoroughly, and give the salad plenty of time in the fridge so the beans drink in the dressing. Made the day before, it transforms from a tidy mix of beans into something deeper and more harmonious, and it will keep happily for days, making it one of the most cookout-friendly sides you can have ready in advance.

Sides 20 minutes Serves8
Watermelon-Feta Salad

Watermelon-Feta Salad

Watermelon and feta sounds, on paper, like a culinary trick that should not work. It came to prominence in the United States through chefs influenced by eastern Mediterranean and Greek traditions, where briny cheese paired with sweet fruit has been quietly understood for centuries. By the early 2000s it was a staple of American summer entertaining, gracing magazine covers and barbecue spreads from California to the Hamptons, and it has earned its place because the contrast is so beautifully balanced. The flavour is built on three opposing notes pulling against each other: the candied sweetness of ripe watermelon, the salty, almost sheepy tang of crumbled feta, and the green, cooling sting of fresh mint. A squeeze of lime and a slow trickle of peppery olive oil tie it all together, while finely sliced red onion adds a sharp savoury bite that keeps the salad from leaning too sweet. There is no cooking involved, so success depends entirely on ingredient quality. The watermelon must be properly ripe, deep red and heavy for its size, and the feta should be the real Greek kind packed in brine, not the dry crumbled supermarket variety. Difficulty is essentially zero, but timing matters. Assemble this just before serving, because watermelon weeps quickly once cut and salted, turning the bowl pink and watery if left to sit.

Sides 15 minutes Serves6