Aji Amarillo Albacore Tostadas


Aji Amarillo Albacore Tostadas

Aji Amarillo Albacore Tostadas

These Aji Amarillo Albacore Tostadas combine a bright note of Peruvian flavor with classic Mexican tradition. Corn tortillas, griddled to a delicate crispness while remaining pliable, are brushed with oil and layered with a spirited Aji Amarillo sauce.

Ribbons of carrot and purple cabbage provide a refreshing crunch beneath lightly marinated albacore, prepared in the spirit of Peruvian ceviche, while fresh cilantro and a side of tangy Salsa Roja add the finishing touch. The result is a dish that’s both visually stunning and beautifully balanced, celebrating the best of Latin-inspired cuisine.


Aji Amarillo Albacore Tostadas

Aji Amarillo paste is made from Peru’s signature golden chili, prized for its fruity, slightly tangy heat and vibrant color. Just a little adds warmth, brightness, and a subtle kick, making it perfect for sauces, ceviches, or the creamy Aji Amarillo sauce on these albacore tostadas.

Albacore Tostadas Recipe

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Butter Masala Chicken Bowl with Green Herb Chutney & Yogurt

Butter Masala Chicken Bowl with Green Herb Chutney & Yogurt

Butter Masala Chicken Bowl
Green Herb Chutney, Yogurt, Jasmine Rice

Imagine tender grilled chicken thighs, in an authentic butter masala sauce, topped with a bright, herbaceous cilantro-mint chutney and a drizzle of yogurt—served with a scoop of fragrant jasmine rice—every bite smoky, tangy, and layered with flavor.

Chicken thighs are cooked on the grill for a smoky char, chopped, then finished in butter, and simmered in the warm, aromatic masala sauce.

The green chutney spooned on top adds a fresh, herbaceous lift, with a kick from chili and ginger and a subtle richness from roasted peanuts. The lightly thinned yogurt brings cooling creaminess, balancing the spice and tying the flavors together.

This colorful Indian-inspired dish combines fire-kissed, juicy chicken in a spiced butter masala sauce with the zesty, vibrant chutney and silky yogurt, creating a harmonious medley of flavors and textures that’s both comforting and exhilarating.

Butter Masala Chicken Bowl Recipe

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Dolly Parton’s Stampede Soup (Cream of Vegetable)

Dolly Parton's Stampede Soup (Cream of Vegetable)

Dolly Parton’s Stampede Soup
(Cream of Vegetable)

🦋 Happy 80th Birthday Dolly! 🦋
Born January 19, 1946
Pittman Center, Tennessee

Dolly Parton’s Stampede Soup is best known as the creamy, comforting vegetable soup served at Dolly Parton’s Stampede Dinner Attraction in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee and Branson, Missouri. It’s one of those quietly nostalgic dishes that people remember just as much as the show.

The soup is a smooth but not overly fancy cream-style vegetable soup, traditionally made with a blend of canned vegetables cooked with onion and butter, thickened with flour, and finished with milk or cream. The flavor is mild, savory, and gently sweet from the vegetables—meant to be crowd-pleasing and soothing rather than bold or spicy.

Texture-wise, it’s typically partially blended: mostly smooth, but with a little body so it doesn’t feel thin or watery. It’s served hot at the beginning of the meal alongside a biscuit, setting a cozy, down-home tone before the rest of the Southern-style dinner arrives.

Dolly Parton's Stampede Soup (Cream of Vegetable)

Like a lot of classic Southern restaurant soups, its appeal isn’t complexity—it’s familiarity. Stampede Soup is simple, comforting, and nostalgic, very much in keeping with Dolly Parton’s brand of warmth and accessibility.

In honor of her 80th birthday, I decided to make Stampede Soup—and to my delight, it exceeded all expectations. I briefly considered using fresh vegetables, but that wouldn’t be true Stampede Soup; it would just be a standard cream of vegetable. So I stuck with the canned mixed vegetables, and sure enough—it was delicious! Surprisingly easy to make, it’s a recipe I would happily recommend to anyone. Thanks, Dolly! 🦋

Dolly Parton's Stampede Soup (Cream of Vegetable)

🐎 Stampede Soup Recipe 🐎

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Reverse-Sear Kurobuta Double-Bone Pork Chop

Reverse-Sear Kurobuta Double-Bone Pork Chop

Reverse-Sear Kurobuta Double-Bone Pork Chop
Parmesan Polenta & Pickled Cherry Pepper Sauce

Back in January 2013, I shared a recipe for Old School–Style Pork Chops with Pickled Cherry Pepper Sauce, and it has remained one of my most popular posts, with tens of thousands of views. But for 2026, I wanted to revisit it, elevate it, and give it the treatment it deserves.

I upgraded the pork to a Kurobuta double-bone chop, refined the technique with a reverse-sear for perfectly juicy edge-to-edge doneness, and captured the process in action shots, from searing to plating, to highlight color, texture, and the drama of cooking.

There are pork chops—and then there is the Kurobuta double-bone pork chop. Thick, succulent, and left intact with two bones, this chop is impossible to ignore. At 1.37 pounds, it’s more than enough for one, and honestly, it’s best shared.

Kurobuta pork, from the Berkshire breed, is prized for marbling, tenderness, and deep flavor, which makes it perfect for a reverse-sear. Slowly roasting the chop in the oven at low heat first ensures even doneness, then finishing with a hot sear gives a golden, caramelized crust. The result is juicy, tender meat with a gorgeously browned exterior.

The chop is the obvious star of the plate, served over creamy Parmesan polenta, which provides a soft, tasty contrast. To balance the richness, it is dressed with the pickled cherry pepper sauce that made the original recipe a favorite. Bright, tangy, and mildly spicy, it lifts the pork and polenta while highlighting the depth of the Kurobuta chop without overpowering it.

Kurobuta Double-Bone Pork Chop, Pickled Cherry Pepper Sauce

Reverse-Sear Pork Chop Recipe

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Lobster Tail, Saffron Risotto with Fennel and Leek

Lobster Tail, Saffron Risotto with Fennel and LeekPetite Broiled Lobster Tail
Saffron Risotto with Fennel and Leek

A petite broiled lobster tail rests atop a bed of saffron risotto, with finely diced fennel and leeks folded in to lend gentle herbal and anise notes that play off the saffron’s floral warmth. The creamy risotto and tender lobster are balanced so that each element shines without overpowering the others, making every bite delicate yet satisfying.

This dish pairs beautifully with a chilled Perrier-Jouët Blanc de Blancs Champagne. Its bright acidity and fine bubbles refresh the palate, while citrus and floral notes echo the saffron and herbs, lifting the flavors and making the combination of risotto and lobster light, aromatic, and memorable.

Lobster Tail, Saffron Risotto Recipe

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