Pomegranate Recipes Two Ways: Salad and Duck

Pomegranate Recipes Two Ways: Salad and Duck

Pomegranate Recipes Two Ways
Vibrant Winter Salad and Crispy-Skin Roast Duck

We’re coming up on the tail end of pomegranate season in the U.S., which runs from September through January, making now the perfect time to take advantage of this beautiful fruit. With their jewel-like arils, pomegranates bring a bright pop of color, a refreshing balance of sweet and tart, and plenty of natural antioxidants.

In today’s recipes, pomegranates appear in two very different dishes: a composed butter lettuce salad and a roast duck with mashed potatoes. Both use pomegranate arils and pomegranate molasses, yet the fruit plays a distinct role in each—bringing brightness and contrast to the salad, and cutting through the richness of the duck with sweet-tart depth.

Pomegranate Recipes

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Nashville Hot Latkes (Potato Pancakes)

Nashville Hot Latkes (Potato Pancakes)

Nashville Hot Latkes
Coleslaw, Horseradish Sour Cream, Pickle Chips

On the first night of Hanukkah, Nashville Hot Latkes made their debut. By the last night, they were so popular they had to make a comeback.

Nashville hot chicken has its roots in African American kitchens in Tennessee, where fried chicken is famously finished with a fiery paste of cayenne, spices, and hot oil, then served atop white bread with pickles to temper the heat.

What began as a local specialty grew into a national obsession because of that unmistakable contrast: crackling crispness, deep savory flavor, and heat that builds and lingers. The final brush of spiced oil isn’t just a garnish—it’s the defining moment, delivering the intensity that makes Nashville hot chicken so addictive.

Nashville Hot Latkes (Potato Pancakes)

Using fried latkes in place of chicken at Hanukkah takes that same spirit in a playful, unexpected direction. Crisp-edged and tender inside, latkes are a natural canvas for bold seasoning.

Nashville Hot Latkes (Potato Pancakes)

Served just like the original—with cool, crunchy coleslaw and sweet-tangy pickles—the heat feels intentional and balanced. For a more traditional nod, a side of horseradish sour cream echoes the way latkes are classically served, adding a creamy, bracing counterpoint. These latkes are spicy—no apologies there—but that’s exactly the point.

Nashville Hot Latkes Recipe

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Ethel M Chocolate & Wine Experience

Ethel M Chocolate & Wine Experience

Ethel M Chocolate & Wine Experience
Holiday Cactus Garden

🍫🍫🍫 🍷🍷🍷 🌵🌵🌵

Las Vegas during the holidays has its own kind of magic, especially in places off the Strip that locals know well but tourists often miss—like the Ethel M Cactus Garden.

Ethel M Holiday Cactus Garden

We recently attended the Ethel M Chocolate & Wine Experience, and it truly exceeded our expectations. What we assumed would be a straightforward tasting turned into a relaxed, informative, and genuinely fun way to savor chocolate alongside perfectly paired wines.

Ethel M Chocolate & Wine Experience

The guided tasting lasts about 40–50 minutes and features five seasonal chocolates, each paired with a wine selected by Ethel M’s Chief Chocolatier, Mark Markey. Along the way, we learned how chocolate is sourced, refined, and made—without it feeling technical or heavy.

Ethel M Chocolate & Wine Experience

🍫 Ethel M 🍫

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Old School Cocktail Meatballs

Old School Cocktail Meatballs

Old School Cocktail Meatballs

Old-school cocktail meatballs with Heinz chili sauce and Welch’s grape jelly are a true vintage appetizer — the kind you’d find at 1960s potlucks, holiday parties, and various buffets. They’re simple, sweet–tangy, and strangely irresistible.

Cocktail meatballs are one of those retro appetizers that never quite went out of style. They’re a classic for a reason.

Not being a fan of the grape jelly (too grape-y tasting) I substitute apricot preserves. And in the past I’ve tried to doctor the sauce with lemon, vinegar, chile flakes, BBQ sauce, soy sauce, even MSG! But in my recipe notes I wrote in bold letters: 1 bottle Heinz chili sauce, 1 jar Bonne Maman apricot preserves, and water as needed, NOTHING ELSE.

I’ve also made it with store-bought meatballs, but the rave reviews come when I make meatballs from scratch. And for an extra kick, we serve them with Trader Joe’s Calabrian Chile Sauce on the side. Now this is a combo that guests absolutely devour!

Old School Cocktail Meatballs Recipe

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Leftover Turkey and Wild Rice Soup

Leftover Turkey and Wild Rice Soup

Leftover Turkey and Wild Rice Soup

This is a hearty, true wild rice soup, and the way it looks on day two is exactly what real ingredients do. The color comes from the wild rice itself — a natural, earthy hue that develops as the grains release their pigment and the broth, turkey, and herbs meld together overnight. The rice has burst, but it holds a gentle chew, never turning mushy nor remaining crunchy.

Instead of looking “styled,” the soup is rustic, grounded, and wholesome — the kind of bowl that tells you it’s going to taste good before you even take a bite. By the next day, the flavors have settled into something fuller and more cohesive, with the kind of comfort only time can give. And unlike many turkey & wild rice soup recipes, this one contains no heavy cream.

Leftover Turkey and Wild Rice Soup

When soup rests overnight, three quiet but important things happen — and these ingredients (turkey, wild rice, herbs, stock) are especially good at this:

While the soup simmers, the elements are still somewhat separate. Overnight, salt, fat, and aromatic compounds redistribute and settle, so instead of tasting “broth + rice + turkey + herbs,” it starts to taste like one unified soup.

The wild rice finishes absorbing flavor from the broth. As it sits, it draws in the savory notes of the turkey and herbs from the liquid it’s in. That’s why the flavor becomes more rounded and savory the next day.

Some of the starches relax and thicken the body slightly. This creates a softer, more cohesive mouthfeel — one that feels more satisfying even without cream. It’s essentially a slow, natural “marinating” that happens in the refrigerator. Nothing extra added, just time doing its job.

To serve, it’s finished with a drizzle of good olive oil for added depth and a silky finish — nothing doctored, nothing forced, just an honest soup made well. With our beloved Thanksgiving Leftovers!

Leftover Turkey and Wild Rice Soup Recipe

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