Easter Recipes | The Odyssey Online
Start writing a post
Lifestyle

Easter Recipes

What can we eat on this holiday?

21
Easter Recipes
caro_oe92, CC0 Creative Commons

We prepare for the scavenger hunt with all our chocolate eggs hidden, and we make sure we bought our food coloring. But did we prepare the food for Easter yet?

In order to help with the Easter Dinner that's upcoming, I've created a list of the most delicious, tasty foods you need at your table.

1. Glazed Ham

The staple of Easter Foods

2. Garlicky Lamb Chops

3. Sunday Rib Roast

4. Bacon Wrapped Boursin Stuffed Chicken Breasts

5. Shrimp Scampi With Parmesan Risotto

6. Pork Chops With Gremolata and Swiss Chard


Desserts for Easter:

We all bake for Easter, or some of us bake and some of us devour the food before it hits the table. Regardless, Easter is the last holiday that you can warm your house with the tasty aroma of a yellow cake, among the other desserts.

1. Carrot Cake Blondies With Cheesecake Swirl

2. Cadbury Egg Inspired Easter Trifle

3. Chocolate Malt Nest Cake

4. Bunny Butt Marshmallows Pops

5. Roasted Strawberry Trifles with Lemon Cream

6. Chocolate Coconut Pound Cake


These are only a few of the Easter recipes that are out there. When in doubt, chocolate (in egg form, bunny form, or just a chocolate bar) is a good dessert for Easter.

Report this Content
This article has not been reviewed by Odyssey HQ and solely reflects the ideas and opinions of the creator.
student sleep
Huffington Post

I think the hardest thing about going away to college is figuring out how to become an adult. Leaving a household where your parents took care of literally everything (thanks, Mom!) and suddenly becoming your own boss is overwhelming. I feel like I'm doing a pretty good job of being a grown-up, but once in awhile I do something that really makes me feel like I'm #adulting. Twenty-somethings know what I'm talking about.

Keep Reading...Show less
school
blogspot

I went to a small high school, like 120-people-in-my-graduating-class small. It definitely had some good and some bad, and if you also went to a small high school, I’m sure you’ll relate to the things that I went through.

1. If something happens, everyone knows about it

Who hooked up with whom at the party? Yeah, heard about that an hour after it happened. You failed a test? Sorry, saw on Twitter last period. Facebook fight or, God forbid, real fight? It was on half the class’ Snapchat story half an hour ago. No matter what you do, someone will know about it.

Keep Reading...Show less
Chandler Bing

I'm assuming that we've all heard of the hit 90's TV series, Friends, right? Who hasn't? Admittedly, I had pretty low expectations when I first started binge watching the show on Netflix, but I quickly became addicted.

Without a doubt, Chandler Bing is the most relatable character, and there isn't an episode where I don't find myself thinking, Yup, Iam definitely the Chandler of my friend group.

Keep Reading...Show less
eye roll

Working with the public can be a job, in and of itself. Some people are just plain rude for no reason. But regardless of how your day is going, always having to be in the best of moods, or at least act like it... right?

1. When a customer wants to return a product, hands you the receipt, where is printed "ALL SALES ARE FINAL" in all caps.

2. Just because you might be having a bad day, and you're in a crappy mood, doesn't make it okay for you to yell at me or be rude to me. I'm a person with feelings, just like you.

3. People refusing to be put on hold when a customer is standing right in front of you. Oh, how I wish I could just hang up on you!

Keep Reading...Show less
blair waldorf
Hercampus.com

RBF, or resting b*tch face, is a serious condition that many people suffer from worldwide. Suffers are often bombarded with daily questions such as "Are you OK?" and "Why are you so mad?" If you have RBF, you've probably had numerous people tell you to "just smile!"

While this question trend can get annoying, there are a couple of pros to having RBF.

Keep Reading...Show less

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Facebook Comments