#main-course
13 viral recipes tagged #main-course.
-
Louisiana Red Beans and Rice
A New Orleans wash-day classic: dried red kidney beans simmered low and slow with andouille, a smoky ham hock, and the Creole trinity until the pot turns thick, silky, and deeply savory. The magic is patience plus mashing a scoop of the cooked beans back in, which builds a creamy gravy with no flour or roux. Ladled over fluffy white rice with a shake of hot sauce, it eats like the most comforting meal in Louisiana.
creolelouisianamain-course -
Chicken-Fried Steak with Gravy
Chicken-fried steak is a Texas diner classic: tenderized beef cube steak dipped in a buttermilk-egg wash, packed in heavily seasoned flour, and shallow-fried until the crust shatters like great fried chicken. A quick cream gravy built from the browned pan drippings, flour, and whole milk pulls it all together with an almost aggressive amount of black pepper. The double-dredge and a short rest before frying are what glue that craggy coating on instead of letting it slide off in the oil.
americansoutherncomfort-food -
Chicken Katsu
Chicken katsu is the Japanese take on a breaded, deep-fried cutlet: chicken breast pounded thin, coated in airy panko, and fried until shatteringly crisp and deep golden. The crust stays light and craggy rather than dense while the meat inside stays juicy, and a tangy-sweet tonkatsu sauce ties it all together. Butterflying the breast into thin cutlets is the key move, because it lets the chicken cook through in the few minutes it takes the panko to turn a rich gold.
japanesemain-coursefried -
Grilled Salmon
Thick, skin-on salmon fillets get a smoky-sweet spice rub, then hit a hot grill so the skin crisps while the inside stays silky and just-set. A quick honey-Dijon-lemon glaze brushed on after the flip caramelizes into a glossy finish without scorching. Grilling over direct heat is fast and forgiving, and the crisp skin does double duty as a built-in non-stick layer.
seafoodgrillingamerican -
Chicken and Dumplings
This is old-fashioned chicken and dumplings: tender pulled chicken and soft vegetables suspended in a creamy, herb-flecked broth, crowned with pillowy drop dumplings that steam right on the surface of the stew. Browning bone-in thighs and stirring up a quick roux gives the sauce deep, savory body, while a splash of milk keeps it silky rather than heavy. Cook the dumplings covered and undisturbed and they come out fluffy on top and just-set underneath every single time.
comfort-foodamericanone-pot -
Crispy Beer Fish Batter
This is the light, lacy coating behind proper British chip-shop fish: a thin beer batter that fries up shatteringly crisp and deep golden while the fish steams tender inside. The lager does double duty, its bubbles and low protein keeping the crust airy rather than bready, while a hit of cornflour and baking powder guarantees crunch. Mixing it ice-cold and frying straight away is the whole trick — the shock of cold batter hitting hot oil is what makes it crackle.
britishmain-coursedeep-fried -
Liver and Onions
Tender pan-seared beef liver draped in a heap of slow-caramelized onions and a quick Worcestershire pan gravy, with crisp bacon crumbled over the top. A milk soak softens the liver's mineral edge, and a fast, hot sear keeps the center just blush-pink so the slices stay silky instead of grainy. It's humble, deeply savory diner food that lives or dies on two things: sweet onions and not overcooking the liver.
americanmain-coursebeef -
Egusi Soup
Egusi soup is a rich, savory Nigerian classic built on ground melon seeds that swell in red palm oil into soft, golden curds cradling assorted meat, stockfish, and smoky dried fish. The finish is deep and nutty with a gentle scotch bonnet heat, ribboned with tender pumpkin leaves. Frying the seasoned egusi paste in bloomed palm oil before adding stock is what gives the soup its signature caked texture instead of a thin, grainy gravy.
nigerianwest-africansoup -
Beef Shish Kabobs
Tender cubes of top sirloin soak in a soy, lemon, and Worcestershire marinade, then grill alongside sweet peppers and red onion until charred at the edges and juicy-pink in the middle. Threading the beef on its own skewers is the trick: the meat hits a perfect medium while the vegetables blister instead of steaming, so every bite tastes grilled, not gray.
grillingbeefsummer -
Cuban Sandwich
A Cuban sandwich layers citrus-marinated mojo roast pork, sweet ham, Swiss cheese, yellow mustard, and dill pickles inside crisp Cuban bread, then presses the whole thing flat until the crust shatters and the melted cheese turns to glue. The contrast of tangy pork, salty ham, sharp mustard, and cool pickle is the entire point, and pressing it under a weight gives you that classic griddled crunch with no special equipment.
cubansandwichmain-course -
Chicken à la King
Chicken à la King is a retro American comfort dish of tender diced chicken and browned mushrooms folded into a silky sherry-spiked cream sauce flecked with sweet pimientos and peas. An egg-yolk-and-cream liaison gives the sauce its glossy, spoon-coating richness without turning gluey, and finishing off the heat keeps it velvety. Ladled over crisp toast points, it tastes like an old-school diner special made properly at home.
americanmain-coursechicken -
Salisbury Steak
Salisbury steak is a diner classic: seasoned ground-beef patties seared until deeply browned, then simmered in a glossy onion-and-mushroom gravy until they drink up the flavor. Grating the onion and soaking panko in milk keeps the patties tender rather than dense, while the fond from searing gives the gravy its rich, savory backbone. It comes together in one skillet and tastes like it braised all afternoon.
americanmain-coursecomfort-food -
Juicy Turkey Burgers
Lean ground turkey has a reputation for turning out dry and bland, but this version stays genuinely juicy thanks to grated onion, a spoonful of mayonnaise, and a panko binder that traps moisture as the patties cook. A quick sear builds a savory browned crust while the inside stays tender, and a hit of Worcestershire, Dijon, and smoked paprika gives every bite real depth. Cook just to 165°F, rest a couple of minutes, and pile onto a toasted bun.
americanmain-courseground-turkey