Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2012

Gratitude, #LetsLunch

Seafood Chowder. Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books
 This year, my teen daughter started high school and is taking an American Government class. For this news junkie mom, morning rides to school have become all about prepping her for class discussions on the hot topics of the day. With prompts from NPR's Morning Edition hosts Steve and Renee, we've covered the presidential election, the Libyan consulate attack, assorted economic indicators, you name it, all in the 15 minute drive from home to school. By the time we get in the car, I've had two cups of coffee and I find myself going on a bit, so much so that when we pull up at the school I want to tell her to stay in the car, I have one more thing I need to tell her before class. (Not that I get chance - she's already slinging her book bag over her shoulder and telling me "goodbye.")

When we talk about the news, I try to bring it home in some way that relates to her life. Some events are easier than others. Last week, as Hurricane Sandy tore up the Eastern Seaboard, leaving destruction and mayhem in its path, we listened to the news reports of the impact of the storms - on the election and the economy, and I asked her if she could predict what the residents of New York, New Jersey and other northeastern states will face as the area recovers.

She knew the answer because we've experienced the same thing. In 2009, our area experienced devastating flooding, when what was called a 500-year flood event shut down the interstate that cuts through the county, wiping out bridges and roads, flooding homes and businesses. Seven people lost their lives in the floods, several by having the bad fortune of being on the roads in the early morning hours when the storms were at their worst.

As we listened to the morning news reports about Hurricane Sandy, we recounted what we knew about recovery from flooding - food, clean water and electricity will be needed. Roads and bridges will be cleared or closed and will take up to several years to repair. Schools will be closed, then reopened. Trees removed, houses and businesses pumped out, and slowly, slowly, slowly life will return to the ins and outs, ups and downs of everyday. Recovery isn't easy and it's certainly not as fast as everyone wants it to be.

As my family gathers around our Thanksgiving table in a couple weeks, and celebrates the American eucharist, we will take turns giving thanks and then say grace. This year, I'll be grateful for the family around the table, the roof over our heads, the comfort of the fire in the fireplace, and the feast on the table.

And morning drives to school.

Seafood Chowder. Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books

It's still a bit early for T-Day food, if you ask me, so until Thanksgiving arrives, I'll share a bit of New England with my seafood chowder recipe. (I know, I know, it's not a Manhattan style chowder, that would have been perfect.) When the rain clouds roll in and the winter winds start blowing, it's hard for me to take my mind off of soups and chowders. Like this seafood chowder, a hearty chill-chaser that will warm you from the inside out. The seafood can vary, but I always use a white fish like flounder as the base, the clams, and bay scallops when they're cheap. Shrimp are good, too, but it does change the character of the soup - shrimp can be the Bossy Pants of the soup bowl, delicious, of course, but not exactly a team player, if you know what I mean.

Seafood Chowder

5 slices bacon
2 medium onions
salt and pepper to taste
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 stalk celery, chopped into 1/2 inch dice
2 carrots, peeled and chopped into 1/2 inch dice
1 (15 oz.) can chicken broth
1 (8 oz.) bottle clam juice
3 (6 oz.) cans chopped clams
3 bay leaves
2 stems of fresh thyme
3 potatoes, peeled and diced 1/2 inch
1/2 to 1 pound of light, white fish, such as flounder, cut into 1-inch cubes
1/2 pound bay scallops
3-4 cups half and half

This is how I make it:

1. Start with a good size Dutch oven. I use my All-Clad stainless and put it on a medium heat. Take five or six slices of bacon, stacked and sliced in 1/4 inch lengths. Fry the bacon until crispy and the drain in paper towels, reserving the grease. Pour the grease into a separate metal container and measure out two tablespoonfuls back into the pan, still on medium heat.

2. Chop two medium-size onions and sizzle those in the bacon grease with the barest pinch of salt, if you must. Everything in this chowder has salt in it, so go easy. You can always adjust the seasonings at the end. After the onions are soft and bacony, add 3 minced cloves of garlic, and stir for just a minute. Chop one stalk of celery and 2 carrots and add to pot, cooking until soft.

3. Add one 15 oz. can of low sodium chicken broth, or water, plus one small bottle of clam juice. Open three cans of chopped clams (I prefer the chopped to minced, those remind me of cat food), and add to the soup, juice and all. Toss in three bay leaves and a bit of freshly ground pepper, perhaps a few thyme stems if the plant is near the kitchen door.

4. Peel three medium all-purpose potatoes and cut into 1/2-inch dice. Put these into the pot and let simmer away. When the potatoes are soft, add one pound of  flounder, chopped into 1-inch squares. You may also want to add sea scallops, if you have those, too. Shelled shrimp are nice. Let the seafood cook through, perhaps five minutes or so.

5.  Just before serving, add a staggering amount of half-n-half, perhaps three or four cups, warm up the soup, then adjust the seasoning. Be sure to remove the thyme stems and bay leaves. Serve this chowder with warm cheesy garlic bread, or just the little hexagonal soup crackers. This will restore your soul on a lousy day.

This post is part of #LetsLunch, a Twitter party on a different foodie topic each month. November's topic is gratitude. To follow along or become a part of the party, just follow #LetsLunch on Twitter or check out the #LetsLunch Facebook page. Here are the November #LetsLunch posts:


'Plumb’ cake from Lisa at Monday Morning Cooking Club
Pain au Levain from Rebecca at Grongar Blog
Seafood Chowder from Lucy at A Cook and Her Books
Cracked Black Pepper and Blue Cheese Crackers from Charissa at Zest Bakery
Gratitude Fried Rice from Linda at Spicebox Travels
A Thanksgiving tablecloth tradition from Lucy at In a Southern Kitche
Gratitude Soup from Rashda at Hot Curries and Cold Beer
Pumpkin Muffins with Cinnamon Sugar (gluten free) from Linda at Free Range Cookies
5 Minute Wonder Soup from Eleanor at Wokstar


 Text and images copyright 2012, Lucy Mercer.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

VBS: Very Busy Summer (or Vacation Bible School)


Fish with grapes and squeezy cheese by Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books

Summer began with a roaring start this year with a weeklong Vacation Bible School, VBS to those in the know. This is a ministry for my church, and it takes a lot of volunteers to pull it off to make a successful program for the 200 children attending. A core group of volunteer and church staff begin planning in December in order to get the program together by June. This year, the theme was Pandamania, a program that teaches God's love through various characters, including Boomer the Panda.

I was very excited this year to be in the kitchen, providing snacks for the kids. And I was in hog heaven on the first day when Kathy, the kitchen leader, asked me to help bake 250 cupcakes. No glue dots in the craft room for this craft-school dropout, cupcakes for 250 is a ministry that I can get into! We learned to use the commercial-size mixer and ovens and even though we used a mix, I was pretty pleased with the results:


VBS cupcake by Laura Mercer/A Cook and Her Books
The week of VBS was a renewing week for me. I love my church, but I'm in the mommy years, which means that when I'm in the church building, I get distracted keeping up with my kids and where they need to be, making sure my own volunteer responsibilities are met, in other words: keeping all my ducks in a row. I hardly have time to hang out and enjoy the other women and the young people around me. During VBS, I put names with faces, matched children to parents, and made new friends while bonding over squeezy cheese and rice cakes.
And speaking of, this was my favorite snack of the week: two Quaker Cheddar Cheese Quakes sandwiched with squeezy cheese and a triangle-shaped Triscuit Thin Crisp to create a fish shape, and a raisin for an eye.


Fish crackers by Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books

(The Quaker Cheddar Cheese Quakes are my current favorite snack food - I could seriously eat an entire bag with no evidence other than the cheesy powder on my fingers.)



What about you? Is VBS a part of your summer? And what is your favorite packaged snack food?



Monday, March 7, 2011

Party on Mardi with this Seafood Creole


Seafood creole with rice by Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books
Devotees of party schedules know that Tuesday is Mardi Gras, the big blow-out before the six weeks of Lent leading up to Easter Sunday. We can't all be in New Orleans or any of the Gulf coast towns that celebrate Mardi Gras, but we can bring a little of Louisiana creole into our kitchens. For about 20 years, I've made seafood creole, a great quantity of crowd-pleasing goodness meant to warm body and soul.

The keys to good creole are quality Gulf Coast seafood and the roux, the butter and flour mixture that flavors and thickens the stew. Taking your time to cook the roux to a deep, dark brown is crucial, and it's really not that much time. The butter and flour are chocolate brown in under 20 minutes.

Give this recipe a try the next time you need to serve a crowd. With a salad and bread on the side, it's Southern comfort in a bowl.

Seafood Creole

4 tablespoons unsalted butter

4 tablespoons all-purpose flour

1 large onion, diced

3 cloves garlic, minced

3 ribs celery, diced

1 red bell pepper, diced

½ cup white wine

2 cans (1 lb. each) whole tomatoes

1 teaspoon salt

½ teaspoon black pepper

½ teaspoon paprika

1 bay leaf

½ teaspoon dried thyme or 1 teaspoon fresh chopped thyme

½ teaspoon hot sauce (optional, season to taste)

¼ teaspoon Creole seasoning (Tony Chachere)

2 pounds of a combination of mild fish such as flounder; peeled, deveined shrimp; and bay scallops

Hot, steamed rice for serving

1. In a large pot or Dutch oven, melt butter until foaming. Stir in flour and cook over medium heat until dark brown, about 20 minutes. The smell will be like nearly burnt buttered popcorn and the color will be like Hershey’s milk chocolate.


A dark chocolate roux. Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books

2. Remove pot from heat and add onion, garlic, celery, bell pepper, wine, tomatoes with liquid, salt, black pepper, paprika, bay leaf and thyme. Stir well. Cover and simmer for at least 10 minutes. Remove cover and continue simmering until vegetables have reached the desired degree of tenderness. You may add the seafood now and serve, or keep cooking the base, either on the stovetop, or covered in the oven at 300. (Check frequently to make sure the liquid level doesn’t get too low.)


The holy trinity of creole cooking: pepper, celery, onion. Lucy Mercer/A Cook and Her Books.


3. Season to taste with creole seasoning and hot sauce as desired. Remove bay leaf. Add seafood last and simmer three to five minutes or until seafood just appears done. Remember that the seafood will continue to cook from the residual heat of the stew. Serve over a bed of hot steamed rice.

Text and images copyright 2011, Lucy Mercer.




Monday, May 3, 2010

Mayonnaise: the Stuff of Life

I recently read that Harp seal mommies nurse their pups for just 12 days before leaving them in the cold North Atlantic waters to search for food. The seal mother’s milk is thick enough to sustain the pup, in fact the book described it as “creamy and thick like mayonnaise.” Another reminder, this time from the animal kingdom, that mayonnaise is the stuff of life.

I come from mayonnaise people. I was raised on mayonnaise. We weren’t loyalists in my parents' house, all brands had a tryout - Kraft, Blue Plate, Hellmann’s and the staple of the South, Duke’s. There was an unfortunate, dark time of a healthy eating kick that meant strange mayo pretend-to-be’s were stocked. A lesson learned the hard way: mayonnaise needs real fat to taste good.

Mayonnaise is a constant thread through the kitchens I have known - my grandmother put mayonnaise in a celadon ceramic crock beside a plate of sliced garden tomatoes. My husband is from Macon, Georgia, and he remembers his grandma serving pound cake slices slathered in mayonnaise and fried. Mayonnaise is culinary glue - it holds together any number of salads - egg, pimento cheese, chicken, tuna, cole slaw, potato. As the basis of a sauce, it can dress up everything from fish to pasta.

Here is a menu celebrating the accessorizing power of mayonnaise and the Dorado that my husband caught last week. It’s a little South of France meets Heart of Dixie, and a tribute to the universality of mayonnaise, a sauce which, if Wikipedia is to be believed, came to France by way of Spain. I used the mayonnaise from a jar, but the recipes are easily adapted to homemade mayo. Follow Francis Lam’s detailed instructions or my streamlined cheat sheet:


Pan-Fried Dorado Sliders with Spicy Tartar Sauce
Fish Stew with Red Pepper Aioli
Fried Pound Cake
sliders

Pan Fried Dorado Sliders with Spicy Tartar Sauce
For the sliders, I dredged chunks of Dorado in seasoned flour and cornmeal and fried them until done. I served them on mini buns with shredded cabbage and this spicy tartar sauce.

1 cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons minced fresh cilantro
10 pickled jalapeƱo rounds, minced
Three teaspoons dill pickle relish
Juice of 1/2 lime
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
Salt and pepper to taste

1. In a bowl, mix all ingredients together. Make ahead for better flavor. Store in refrigerator.

fish stew

Fish Stew with Red Pepper Aioli

Fish stew
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 carrot, peeled and finely chopped
2 leeks, chopped, use the whites and part of the greens
1 cup white wine
2 cups shrimp stock or clam juice or water
4 cloves garlic
Salt and fresh ground black pepper to taste

1/2 pound fish fillets, chopped into bite-size pieces

1. In a stockpot, saute carrot and leeks in olive oil until soft. Add white wine and cook until reduced by half. Add stock or clam juice or water, and garlic and cook for 10 minutes.

2. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Add fish and cook for about 5 minutes, or until cooked through. Serve with red pepper aioli.

Red pepper aioli
1 cup mayonnaise
1 roasted, peeled and seeded red bell pepper
5 garlic cloves
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
Salt and pepper to taste

1. In a food processor, with blade running, drop in garlic cloves. Add bell pepper and process until pasty. Add remaining ingredients and process. Make a day ahead for better flavor. Store in refrigerator.

fried pound cake

Fried Pound Cake
This is my husband's childhood treat, a slice of pound cake, buttered on both sides with mayonnaise and cooked on a griddle. It's sweet and salty at the same time. I would say add sweetened berries and whipped cream, but it's pretty indulgent on its own.

© 2010, Lucy Mercer.
Fish Stew and Red Pepper Aioli adapted from the New California Cook by Diane Rossen Worthington.
Spicy Tartar Sauce adapted from Fine Cooking Magazine.
Fried Pound Cake adapted from a fine country cook.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Menu for a Cold Inaugural Day

It's a glorious, cold day in Georgia. Sitting on the sofa with my tv clicker and a box of tissues, watching my President take the oath of office, I planned tonight's menu.


Sauteed Halibut Fillets
Winter Root Vegetables with Horseradish and Dill
Fudgy Brownies
The vegetables were from the Gourmet Cookbook and featured steamed Brussels sprouts, turnips, potatoes and carrots in a horseradish and butter sauce, tossed with fresh dill just before serving. I thought the vegetables were terrific, but as a whole, the dish didn't overwhelm the kids. When I make it again, I will just use the sprouts and potatoes, kind of a Lilliputian version of colcannon (with horseradish).