Love at first bite: Valentine's Day recipes for two

Create magic on the plate, without working up a sweat in the kitchen, with food editor Tony Turnbulls easy dishes, from gnocchi to tuna steak
https://www.thetimes.com/life-style/food-drink/article/valentines-day-recipe-ideas-6jq7p57tg
https://archive.ph/L4kMG
Chicken in parma ham with lentils; berries with zabaglione.... ROMAS FOORD FOR THE TIMES MAGAZINE
You may wonder what someone with 32 years of marriage under his belt knows about romance. As it happens, quite a lot. I know, for example, that Valentines Day next Saturday is the worst night to go out. A dining room full of whispering couples and a set menu of clichéd innuendo does not true love make. No, stay in and make an effort thats the grandest gesture. Not so much that you are an exhausted wreck, but just enough to show you care. (And dont, for goodness sake, leave a pile of washing-up.)
Tuna with ginger and sesame

This is quick and easy and makes a simple starter, or serve it with rice and veg for an equally undemanding main course.
Ingredients
1 small knob of fresh ginger
2 tbsp sesame seeds
Black pepper
2 fresh tuna steaks
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tbsp rice vinegar
1 spring onion, sliced
Half a red chilli, deseeded and sliced
Splash of oil
Method
1. Peel the ginger and grate into a bowl with the sesame seeds and a good grind of black pepper. Mix well. Press the tuna into the mixture to coat both sides.
2. Combine the soy and vinegar in a small bowl and add the spring onion and chilli.
3. Heat a splash of oil in a pan over a medium heat. Cook the tuna briefly (about 90 seconds on each side) and serve with the dipping sauce on the side.
Haddock en papillote with slow-roasted tomatoes

Cheats millefeuille

Gnocchi with squash, hazelnuts and sage

Chicken in parma ham with lentils

Berries with zabaglione

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