Seafood
Red Snapper and Cepes in a Port Reduction
Editor's note: This recipe is excerpted from Maguy Le Coze and Eric Ripert's book the Le Bernardin Cookbook.
To read more about Ripert, click here.
Eric: My friend Albert Core gave me the idea to combine port and sherry vinegar, and after some experimenting, I found a way to do it. The result was this snapper, my first signature dish at Le Bernardin. Everyone loved it immediately, except for Maguy, who didn't even want to put it on the menu. Now, of course, she loves it, too.
Maguy: I didn't want this dish going on the menu, and Gilbert said he didn't care, he loved it. It was the first time we disagreed. So I invited some friends for dinner and asked them what they thought. They all said it was great. I was furious! Now I love it, so much so that the kitchen knows to send extra sauce on the side.
By Maguy Le Coze and Eric Ripert
Poaching Lobster
By Maguy Le Coze and Eric Ripert
Lobster Stock
By Maguy Le Coze and Eric Ripert
Warm Lobster Salad
Editor's note: This recipe is excerpted from Maguy Le Coze and Eric Ripert's book the Le Bernardin Cookbook.
To read more about Ripert, click here.
Eric: This was one of Gilbert's specialties and was always one of the most popular items on the menu. I think it closed more than one deal, and definitely led to some second dates. If you want, you can make it with langoustine or spiny lobster.
By Maguy Le Coze and Eric Ripert
Chile-Rubbed Shrimp with Avocado Corn Cocktail
I've never quite understood the appeal of the traditional shrimp cocktail. I mean, what could be less interesting than cold boiled shrimp dipped in a lackluster mixture of ketchup and prepared horseradish? Here's a shrimp cocktail with gumption, featuring chile-rubbed, grill-seared shrimp served over a colorful, chunky salsa of avocado and sweet corn. You can chill the grilled shrimp before you serve them, but I like the contrast of hot shrimp and cool salsa.
By Steven Raichlen
Snapper with Almonds
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from French Women Don't Get Fat by Mireille Guiliano.
I didn't much care for fish when I was growing up, but I loved nuts. My mother knew both were essential for good nutrition, so she invented this way of slipping in the fish.
By Mireille Guiliano
Fettuccine with Preserved Tuna, Capers, and Olives
I grew up in a household where we didn't eat meat on Friday, which presented a problem because when I was a child, I didn't like most fish or shellfish. My mother solved this dilemma by making me pasta with canned tuna and tomato sauce. This is my adult version of that recipe, made with high-quality preserved tuna with capers and anchovies added to hit the notes one expects in such a classic seafood pasta.
By Alfred Portale and Andrew Friedman
White Fish Stock
You can make this stock with a variety of fish carcasses (from nonoily fish) or with just one type — whatever your seafood market can give you. This recipe makes more stock than you'll need for the fideos with mussels , but leftovers can be frozen and used for soups, stews, and sauces.
Chinese Broccoli with Crabmeat
If Chinese broccoli isn't available in your area, you can substitute regular broccoli.
By Nina Simonds
Broiled Mackerel with Ginger and Garlic
This mackerel, which pairs well with the fennel endive salad , was inspired by our trips to Southeast Asia, where dishes are commonly served with whole sprigs of fresh herbs for diners to pull off the leaves and eat as desired. Incidentally, this means less chopping for the cook. Also, to save time, we minced the ginger and garlic in a mini food processor.
Fideos with Mussels
Fideos, pasta nests that are often toasted in oil, are popular on the eastern coast of Spain. Here, the sauce is enhanced with a sofrito, a concentrated mixture that imparts a deep tomato flavor. The browned fideos slowly absorb the seafood-based sauce as they cook.
Pan-Seared Scallops with Smoked-Tomato Butter and Warm Spinach Salad
This recipe makes more smoked-tomato butter than you need for the scallops — use the leftover butter on steak or fish.
By Sean Myers
Salmon and Scallop Terrine with Frisée Salad
This update on a classic terrine is made with an aromatic broth and olive oil instead of cream. If you're short on time, don't bother with the leek lining—though it is pretty, the terrine works fine without it.
Shrimp and Black-Eyed Pea "Croquettes"
If you substitute regular bread crumbs for the panko, the coating will be heavier and the texture denser. In this recipe, the peas are soaked but not precooked before grinding, much like in a falafel.
A Mussels Soup from Bosa
Zuppa di Cozze Come la Fanno a Bosa
Like other coastal towns on Sardinia, Bosa also has an excellent maritime cuisine. An example is this excellent mussels soup. Two ingredients unique to it are the grated sheep's milk cheese that cooks along with the mussels, deepening their flavor, and the bread crumbs—some Sardinian cooks use couscous instead—that add texture and density to the mussel juices.
By Marcella Hazan
Baked Sockeye Salmon with Bell Peppers and Capers
Salmone Sockeye al Forno con Peperoni e Capperi
Fresh wild salmon, including the late-season ones from Alaska, would be the best choice for this preparation. What to do when the season ends? Well, there are always available steelhead trout and Arctic char and, of course, farmed Atlantic salmon.
By Marcella Hazan
Salt Cod in Tomato Garlic Confit
The Spanish eat salt cod often and, given the excellence of their cod, it's no wonder — the dried fish is snowy white, delicate, and, once rehydrated, tender enough to eat raw. Though you can't get the same thing here, the salt cod from the Spanish specialty store La Tienda is very good (they sell lomo — the center cut — which we prefer over the chewy, skinny end pieces), and its turnover is high, so there's no concern that the fish has been sitting on the shelves too long.
Sticky Rice with Chinese Sausage and Dried Scallops
By Bruce Cost
Mussels with Tomato Broth
These mussels are a snap to prepare, and make a hearty meal when paired with a loaf of crusty bread to mop up the rich tomato broth.
Be sure to buy your mussels the day you make this dish, as they don't keep well at home.