Showing posts with label Seafood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seafood. Show all posts
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Smoked Salmon Tartare for Holiday Entertaining

 

Tartare (“à la tartare," in culinary French) means “in the Tatar (or Tartar) manner.” The original Tartare was finely chopped raw beef, typically mixed with raw egg, onion, and capers. Serving raw chopped beef was picked up by the Russians in past centuries from their nomadic Mongol-Turkic Tatar neighbors. “Steak tartare” is now a well-established European, especially French, dish.

 


My “tartare” leaves out the beef but, rather, contains quasi-raw smoked salmon. But like the beef original it includes capers and onion. Hard-boiled egg, optionally, can be used as a toping.

 

I’m noticing at the stores that smoked salmon is increasingly showing up with special flavorings, like black pepper, “Cajun,” “Pastrami,” or even Siracha. This recipe is for the simple smoked salmon that was, and to me still is, special enough.

 

The dish makes an elegant appetizer for a holiday buffet or a fancy appetizer for dinner. The recipe serves six or more as an appetizer with crackers or melba toast.

 

1/2 pound smoked salmon (cold-smoked, from Scotland or Norway, or hot-smoked, as from Alaska)

2 tablespoons finely minced red onion

1 tablespoon drained capers, coarsely chopped if larger than peppercorns

1 tablespoon snipped or coarsely chopped fresh dill, plus dill sprigs for garnish

6 hearty grinds of black pepper

1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice

1 hardboiled egg, white party only, finely minced, for garnish (optional)

 

On a cutting board, using a chef’s knife, finely chop the salmon (minus any skin). Mix well in a bowl with minced onion, seasonings and capers. Taste, and add salt only if needed (smoked salmon is salted). Refrigerate, covered, at least half an hour -- preferably overnight.

 

Serve in a decorative bowl or heaped up on an attractive small platter. Garnish, if desired, by sprinkling with minced hard-cooked egg whites. Top with dill sprigs.

 

Accompany with crackers, a plain, low salt variety, like water crackers, preferred,

 

 

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Pasta with Smoked Salmon and Peas -- Easy

 

 

Smoked salmon is not common in Italy, while in Northern Europe, especially Scandinavia, it is extremely popular. But in Italy this special fish has one principal use: tossed in with pasta. Here is an attractive and super-easy pasta dish with smoked salmon and peas.

 

Like other pasta with seafood dishes, this one does not contain cheese. Cheese can be used in the antipasto, or strips of cheese, like Parmesan sliced off the block with a vegetable peeler, can be served on the salad.

 

The dish is made fresh and served hot. The recipe serves six. A salad is a nice accompaniment.

 

A hearty, chilled white wine, such as an un-oaked Chardonnay or a Viognier, or a somewhat cooled Pinot noir or Chianti (20 minutes in the refrigerator before serving) would be my pairing with this dish.

 

1 medium-large clove garlic

2 tablespoons olive oil

3/4 cup heavy cream

3/4 teaspoon salt, plus more if needed

1/2 teaspoon paprika

1/8 teaspoon black pepper

A pinch of cayenne

1 cup frozen peas

4 ounces smoked salmon, cold-smoked preferred

1/2 pound short pasta, such as penne or farfale (“bow ties”)

A little of the hot water from boiling the pasta, saved

 

Heat a large quantity of water for cooking the pasta. Keep it hot until time to cook the pasta.

 

Put garlic through a garlic press or mince it finely. Place in a large microwaveable bowl, from which the pasta will be served. Add olive oil, mix with the garlic, then microwave for 1 minute.

 

Add cream, salt and spices, and microwave 1 minute. Mix in frozen peas and hold until pasta is nearly cooked.

 

Cut salmon into 1/2-inch squares and keep ready for tossing with the pasta.

 

Add a teaspoon salt to the pasta water and boil the pasta, stirring constantly for the first 30 seconds so pasta does not stick together, then often during the cooking. After 7-8 minutes, depending on the pasta, cool then bite into a piece of pasta to test for tenderness. As soon as all crunch is gone from the pasta and it starts to become tender, drain it, saving a little of the cooking water in a cup.

 

Put the bowl with the cream and pea mixture back in the microwave and heat for 2 minutes, or until peas are hot. Stir, add the cut salmon and the drained, cooked pasta and toss well. If the sauce is dry, add a little of the hot pasta-cooking water. Taste, and if under-salted, add a little (the salmon may be salty, so be cautious).

 

Serve immediately.

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Teriyaki Salmon -- with Gluten-Free Option

 

Teriyaki, a traditional Japanese cooking method primarily used for fish, literally means shiny and grilled or broiled. In other Asian countries, similar methods, though with other names, are also used and are applied to chicken and pork in addition to fish.

 

Here’s the way I have been making teriyaki, primarily with salmon and roasting it in the oven, for some years at our restaurant. We’ve prepared it mostly for catering, using one or more whole salmon fillets, which makes an attractive party dish. (The same marinade can be used for boneless, skinless chicken thighs, which can be cooked on the grill or griddle.)

 

Soy sauce is essential for the teriyaki seasoning. A Japanese soy (such as Kikkoman, which is readily available in the US) or Korean soy have the appropriate flavor. Most soy sauces include wheat, and therefore gluten, in their fermentation process. People who must avoid gluten can get a gluten-free equivalent sauce, such as a Japanese “tamari,” which also gives the right flavor.

 

The recipe serves four, accompanied by rice and a stir-fried vegetable. The fish can be served hot for dinner, or at room temperature as part of an appetizer buffet.

 

1 pound piece of salmon fillet

2 tablespoons soy sauce, preferably Japanese or Korean, or gluten-free tamari

1-1/2 teaspoons sweet rice wine or “Mirin” (substitute is dry Sherry)

1 teaspoon rice vinegar or white vinegar

1 tablespoon sugar

1/2 teaspoon cornstarch

3/8 teaspoon salt

3/4 teaspoon grated fresh ginger

1/4 teaspoon Asian sesame oil

1 teaspoon canola or sunflower oil

Some thinly sliced green onion tops or chives for garnish

 

Wipe the salmon piece with paper towel. If the salmon still has skin on it, remove it by placing the salmon skin side down on a cutting board and with a sharp knife cutting a quarter inch into one end of the fish between the skin and the flesh. Then holding the skin down with your fingertips, slice along the skin to free the flesh from the skin.

 

Combine the remaining ingredients, aside from the green onion or chives for the garnish, and stir well. Marinate the fish in a flat-bottomed container for several hours, occasionally lifting the fish a little to get marinade under it and spooning marinade over the top.

 

Heat the oven to 375 degrees. Place the salmon on a baking sheet. Drizzle a little of the marinade over the salmon and discard remaining marinade. Roast 14 minutes on an upper rack. If the surface is looking cooked, test by sticking the tip of a small sharp knife into the fish with the “grain” and twist the knife gently to see if the raw color is almost gone. If not, roast another 2 minutes and test again. Do not overcook.

 

Teriyaki salmon can be eaten hot or cold. Platter the fish and sprinkle lightly with sliced green onion top or chives.


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Pasta al Tonno, Pasta with Tuna and Tomato

 

 

In the United States, we are familiar with a limited number of pasta dishes. By contrast, in Italy, where pasta is ubiquitous, there are dozens if not hundreds of different, named, pasta dishes. Many of those are lighter, or simpler, than what we are used to. But in Italy, pasta typically serves as an early course in the dinner, or sometimes as a snack or light lunch, and not as the main dinner dish.

 

I first encountered pasta with tuna in Sicily, in Syracusa specifically. As I recall it was made with a “long” pasta, spaghetti or possibly linguine. But the dish can also be made with “short” pasta.

 

I’ve since learned that most of the tuna fishing by Italian fishermen is based out of coastal villages in Sicily. And while pasta with tuna and tomato is made elsewhere in Italy, it is a specialty in Sicily, particularly when made with fresh tuna. I’m pretty sure, though, that the pasta al tonno I first ate had canned tuna, as the dish typically does in Italy.

 

Here’s a delightful, fairly light, Pasta al Tonno, that can serve as part of a dinner, or as a light meal in its own right, accompanied by a simple salad. This dish is relatively quick and easy to make, but should be cooked shortly before eating.

 

In Italian cooking, pasta dishes that feature seafood, rather than meat or vegetables, rarely also contain cheese. Cheese makes a pasta dish heavy, and the point of seafood is lightness.

 

The best canned tuna for this dish is imported from Italy and is solid and packed in olive oil. At our local supermarket the closest I can get is Yellow Fin tuna canned in olive oil with the brand name “Genova.” which though not actually from Italy works satisfactorily for the dish.

 

The Italian trick of gently frying the garlic, somewhat crushed, in olive oil till golden then removing it keeps the floral essence of garlic without any of the bitterness or coarseness.

 

The recipe serves 6 people as the pasta course of a bigger dinner or as a light lunch or supper meal. In Italy, salad is served after the main course, but here we’d typically have the salad along with the pasta or dinner.

 

1 (4 to 5 ounce) can solid-meat tuna packed in oil, preferably olive oil

3 large cloves of garlic, peeled and partially crushed (with the bottom of a tumbler)

2 tablespoons capers, drained (optional)

1/4 teaspoon dry crushed red pepper flakes

1 (14-ounce) can petite diced tomatoes

1/2 teaspoon salt

6 medium-sized fresh basil leaves, or leaves from 4 sprigs flat (“Italian”) parsley

3 tablespoons olive oil

8 ounces (1/2 pound) spaghetti, or short pasta, such as Rotini or Ziti

 

Have all the ingredients ready, cans opened, etc. Keep the juices in the tuna can, since they are used in the recipe. Bring a large pot of water to a boil and add a teaspoon of salt, ready to boil the pasta.

 

Heat a heavy, shallow pan to medium-low, and gently fry the crushed garlic in the olive oil, stirring very frequently, until the garlic is golden colored. Lift garlic out of the pan, keeping the now-flavored oil in the pan. Add the drained capers, if used, and stir and fry about 10 seconds. Add the crushed dry pepper and stir and fry 5 seconds. Add the tomatoes and their juices to the pan. Press the lid of the tuna can gently into the tuna and add the juices to the pan. Stir and fry the tomatoes over medium heat a few minutes until the liquid is reduced somewhat. Stir in the salt and basil or parsley leaves and turn off the heat.

 

While the tomatoes are cooking, add the pasta to the boiling, salted water, and stir well for the first minute so the pasta doesn’t stick together. Then stir it less frequently. After 5 minutes or so, begin biting into a bit of the pasta to check for tenderness. When no crunch is present, and the pasta reaches the tenderness you want, drain it in a colander, catching some of the pasta water in a small bowl.

 

Put drained pasta into a bowl to mix, add the cooked tomato sauce. Using a fork, break up the tuna in its can and add it to the pasta. Toss this all together briefly. If the mixture is dry, add a little of the reserved pasta-boiling water to moisten it. Taste for salt, and if needed add a bit. Transfer mixed pasta to a serving bowl and serve immediately.

 

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 Mediterranean-Style Tomatoes with Tuna Stuffing

 

 

If these beautiful appetizers aren’t Mediterranean,  French or Spanish, they should be. Tuna-stuffed tomatoes just scream summertime in Provence or Valencia! I believe I actually had something like this with French friends many years ago. But my memory tends to be generous.

 

American fresh tomatoes stuffed with mayonnaise-heavy chicken salad or tuna salad were an item from my mother's generation, and considered quite genteel. Necessarily seasonal, they were realistic only in summer in those ancient days before trucks and planes brought in nearly vine-ripe produce from Florida and California and Chile.

 

Now, thanks to agricultural advances we have tomatoes year round that actually taste like something. “Campari” tomatoes are a hybrid (but not the much-vilified GMO) developed in the 1990s for commercial greenhouse and hydroponic growing. These intensely red, small (about 2-inch diameter), round beauties, often sold “on the vine,” are sweet and tasty, and are available in supermarkets most of the time. They seem ideal for this European-style “small dish.”

 

In the Mediterranean, “light” rather than white or Albacore tuna is preferred, and it’s usually packed in olive or other oil rather than water. My recipe calls for oil-packed light tuna, from Italy if available, for the most Mediterranean taste. Several of the other ingredients are also Mediterranean, including green olives, capers, olive oil and wine vinegar. The round bottoms on Campari tomatoes makes standing them up on a platter a bit difficult. A tiny slice off the bottom of the tomatoes, or a thin bed of finely shredded lettuce under them will help.

 

The recipe serves 4 as an appetizer or 2-3 as a luncheon. They should be eaten fairly fresh, but can be stored in the refrigerator for an hour or so. If stored too long the tomato softens.

 

1 pound (usually 1 package) Campari tomatoes, as similar in size as possible

1 (4-ounce) can light or white tuna, packed in oil, Italian if available

1 green onion, green and white parts

1 inch piece of celery stalk

8 small green pimento-stuffed olives

1 teaspoon capers, drained

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper

A pinch of cayenne

1/2 teaspoon olive oil

1/2 teaspoon wine vinegar

A little minced parsley or green onion top for garnish

 

Rinse and drain the tomatoes. With a sharp knife, thinly slice off their tops. Save the tops. (Optionally, in addition, cut a very thin slice off the bottoms of the tomatoes so eventually they will stand up easier on a serving dish.) With a small spoon (a teaspoon-sized measuring spoon is useful) scoop out the juicy middles of the tomatoes, and put those middles in a colander or sieve to drain. Turn the hollowed-out tomatoes upside down on a paper towel to drain.

 

On a cutting board, using a chef’s knife, cut the flesh off the tomato tops, discarding the stem-attachment area. With the knife, finely chop both these pieces of top and the middles of the tomatoes. Return the chopped tomato flesh to the colander or sieve and press it down firmly to get rid of the juices. Put the pressed tomato flesh into a mixing bowl.

 

On the cutting board, finely mince the green onion and piece of celery, along with the drained olives and capers. Add this mixture to the chopped tomato flesh

 

Open the can of tuna and press the can lid firmly into the fish to squeeze out the liquid. Add the pressed tuna to the mixing bowl. Add the salt, pepper, cayenne, olive oil and vinegar. With a spoon or fork break up any pieces of tuna, and combine the mixture well. Taste for salt, and mix in a little if desired.

 

Spoon tuna mixture into the hollowed-out tomatoes, filling them evenly and mounding the filling on top as necessary. On the cutting board finely mince a small amount of parsley or green onion top and place a small amount on the center of the filled tomatoes.

 

Serve now or refrigerate up to an hour. If too long the tomato loses its firmness.

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