Summer Recipes: 5-Ingredient Dishes You Can Make Tonight

8 Easy Summer Recipes That Need Only 5 Ingredients
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By Lynn Andriani

If you have salt, pepper and olive oil on hand, all you need are a few more items, and you're well on your way to eight amazing dishes you'll be making all season long.

30-Minute Pork Chops That Have No Business Tasting So Delicious
Lucy Schaeffer
Pork chops that are crisp on the outside and juicy on the inside, bursting with the rich flavor of oregano and rosemary may sound like a strictly-weekend, multi-step affair. But Melia Marden, executive chef at New York restaurant The Smile and author of the new book Modern Mediterranean, shows us that it's totally doable in less than a half-hour.
Get the recipe: Rosemary & Oregano Pork Chops
Your New Summer Pasta Standby
Lucy Schaeffer
The best thing about this ridiculously easy pasta dish from Marden is that you can eat it straight from the stove or serve it at room temperature for barbecues or picnics. Use a mixture of red and yellow cherry tomatoes if you can find them; they look fantastic alongside torn basil leaves and small chunks of fresh mozzarella.
Get the recipe: Spaghetti with Heirloom Cherry Tomatoes
A Green Bean Salad That Redefines The Dish
Lucy Schaeffer
Banish the thought of overcooked, mushy string beans: In this smart recipe, Marden cooks the beans in a small amount of water until they're just tender but still bright green. Then, she removes them, dries the pan and flash-fries the vegetables in olive oil until they're slightly charred all over. The finishing touch: garnishes of fried shallots, chopped basil and crumbled pecorino cheese.
Get the recipe: String Beans with Fried Shallots, Pecorino & Basil
The Make-Ahead Greek Specialty
Lucy Schaeffer
Beefsteak tomatoes stuffed with sauteed onion and garlic, ground beef, rice and dill are staples in Greek tavernas, Marden says. Cooks make them in the morning and keep them in a heated display case that's just slightly above room temperature, so if you order one in the afternoon or evening, it's perfectly plump and juicy. If you make yours ahead of time, you can refrigerate them -- and just warm them gently in the oven before serving.
Get the recipe: Stuffed Tomatoes
The Grilled Chicken You Can Make In Your Sleep
Elana Amsterdam
Some marinade recipes have a mile-long ingredient list, but this one relies on just a few items -- and each of them delivers super flavor. Lime juice and chili powder are two of the key players that make this a perfect warm-weather grilled chicken dish.
Get the recipe: Mustard-Lime Chicken
The Fresh Garden Pasta
Emma Galloway
No limp, soggy slices of zucchini here: For this vegetarian dish, you cut the squash into long, thin matchsticks. Since there's less surface area, the zucchini keeps its bite and becomes just a little soft when you saute it with olive oil, chili, garlic and lemon zest. The recipe calls for gluten-free spaghetti, but you can substitute whatever kind you like.
Get the recipe: Zucchini, Garlic and Lemon Spaghetti
The Speedy Shrimp Skewers
Steve Legato
When you have better things to do than spend hours in the kitchen, turn to this quick supper: All you need to do is thread shrimp on wooden sticks, cover them in a dressing of olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, cayenne pepper and salt, and throw them in the fridge for a few hours. When it's time to eat, grill for about 3 minutes per side -- and enjoy with guacamole and margaritas.
Get the recipe: Spicy Citrus Grilled Shrimp
The Fruity Side Dish
Paulette Phlipot © 2012
A sweet and spicy combination of cinnamon, star anise, anise seeds, cinnamon and cloves, Chinese five-spice powder has a ton of uses: as a spice rub for chicken or pork, in vegetable stir-fries or even in baked goods. Here, it's sprinkled on top of pineapple chunks -- which you then grill for a side that goes with almost any summer meal.
Get the recipe: Grilled Five-Spice Pineapple Kabobs
Next: Grilled lemonade and 6 more delicious summer recipes

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When You Need A Fix -- Now(01 of07)
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Once-maligned Brussels sprouts have been getting more and more love lately, showing up shaved in salads and roasted with pancetta. Here's one way you may not have tried these baby cabbages yet: with the leaves separated and each one roasted to a crisp. They're so thin, they cook in just a few minutes, and even slightly charred, they're addictive.
Get the recipe: Roasted Brussels Sprout Chips
(credit:Lynn Andriani)
When Those Bacon-Flavored Chips Are Calling Your Name(02 of07)
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Oprah's former personal chef, Art Smith, whose new book is Art Smith's Healthy Comfort, admits these tasty little garbanzo bean snacks are so easy to make it's almost ludicrous to give a recipe for them. All you do is pour a drained can of garbanzos onto a baking sheet with a few shakes of smoked paprika (which mimics bacon's woodsy flavor) and onion powder, and roast until the beans are browned on the outside but still tender inside.
Get the recipe: Smoky Paprika-Baked Garbanzo Beans
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When You Need A Sturdy Dipper(03 of07)
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Homemade pita chips are a lot simpler to make than you might think -- and they're also much less greasy and salty than the ones in shiny foil-y bags. In her new book Crackers & Dips, cooking instructor Ivy Manning shares her recipe, which involves sprinkling wedges of the flatbread with za'atar, a Middle Eastern herb blend. The savory snacks are terrific with Mediterranean spreads such as Tzatziki or White Bean Dip.
Get the recipe: Za'atar-Dusted Pita Chips
(credit:Jennifer Altman)
When You're Trying To Break Your Addiction To Dill Pickle-Flavored Chips(04 of07)
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The first time cooking teacher Kim Kushner, author of The Modern Menu, made this cauliflower dish, she and her dinner guests ate it straight out of the pan, with no leftovers. It's easy to see why: thin slices of the vegetable soak up the puckery lemon-dill dressing and, if you roast them long enough, become crunchy and buttery-tasting.
Get the recipe: Crispy Cauliflower with Tomatoes and Dill
(credit:Andrew Zuckerman)
When You Are Not Going To Settle for Anything Less Than A Potato(05 of07)
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Sweet-potato chips can be even more satisfying than the usual versions, since you get a caramel-like flavor along with salt and crunch. This recipe from the healthy food site BerryRipe.com combines cinnamon and chili powder, so each bite is sweet and a little spicy, too.
Get the recipe: Sweet and Salty Baked Sweet Potato Chips
(credit:Seth Bleiler)
When You're Feeling Tropical(06 of07)
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Plantains look like bananas, but they're much starchier, and therefore do a terrific job of filling in for potatoes (even if they aren’t as crunchy as chips). They're often fried and served alongside Caribbean food, but this recipe from Elizabeth Gordon, author of Simply Allergy-Free, has you wrap them in aluminum foil and bake them, toss them with margarine and salt, and slice them for an irresistible side.
Get the recipe: Baked Plantains
(credit:Melani Bauman and Lorna Palmer)
When You Could Eat An Entire Bag(07 of07)
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Superfood kale is a surprisingly flavorful craving-killer. When you tear the leaves into bite-size pieces, toss them with olive oil and pepper and roast them for just 10 minutes, they turn crispy and light. You can eat these chips by the handful and still have room for supper.
Get the recipe: Kale Chips
Next: 9 gluten-free grab-on-the-go snacks
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