Tag Archive for seafood

Panko Crusted Flounder with Coconut-Ginger Rice and Pico de Gallo

It’s hard to believe that I’m almost finished with level 2 at FCI, these first 12 weeks flew by!  We’ve been tasked with out first project as apart of our final for the level and i’m thrilled that we get an opportunity to showcase our creativity for our chef instructors.  The title of the project is “flounder your way” and we have to prepare a dish using flounder and can choose from a list of supplied ingredients to create sides and garnishes.  In addition to the flounder recipe, we also have to present a menu showcasing four appetizer, seafood, meat and poultry, and dessert courses, one of which will be the flounder dish.

I thought it would be nice to pay homage to the cuisine of my home state and came up with a Florida-themed menu featuring fresh, bright dishes using local ingredients.  Our ingredient list thankfully has some great tropical choices like lime, cilantro, ginger, coconut milk, and jalapeno which made the thought process even easier.  After working out the concept on paper, I came up with panko crusted flounder with coconut-ginger rice, crispy shallots, and pico de gallo.  It incorporates the right amount of crunch, acid, and sweetness to make it a balanced dish.  Of course the challenge is making it taste just as good on the plate as it sounds on paper.

After a long trek to Whole Foods on a cold, rainy evening I got to work in my test kitchen (aka my apartment) and diligently wrote down each step and measurement as I went along.  I was careful to pay attention to each technique, making sure every cut was precise and my actions matched what I would have to showcase at school.  I was pleasantly surprised how much my skills have improved in my home kitchen without the comforting guidance of a chef over my shoulder.

The finished product turned out to be a really colorful, flavorful dish that I was proud of on the first go round.  The flounder was super crunchy because of the panko breading and I managed to cook it perfectly without burning the crust.  This was also my first time cooking rice in coconut milk and I was in awe of how the rice came out with a creamy, almost sticky consistency similar to sushi rice.  To add extra flavor, I infused ginger, garlic, cilantro, and lime juice into the milk which really came through in the rice.  The acid from the lime juice and tomatoes in the pico de gallo rounded out the flavor of the fish and really made it all pop.  All in all it was a rewarding evening, one that showed me how far i’ve really come.

This is a perfect meal to enjoy on a hot summer evening with a chilled glass of sauvignon blanc, or in the dead of winter when you are longing for a taste of somewhere warm and tropical.  Bon appetit!

Note: This pico de gallo would be even more amazing if you added some diced mango, unfortunately that was not on my ingredient list, but I highly recommend you giving it a try. Also, make sure you leave the aromatics for the rice large enough that you will be able to fish them out when the rice is done.

Panko Crusted Flounder with Coconut-Ginger Rice and Pico de Gallo

The tropical flavors of coconut, ginger, and lime combine with crunchy fresh flounder to bring a taste of Florida to your home kitchen.

Serves 2

The quality of this picture doesn't do this dish justice, but it's definitely delish.

Ingredients

For the Pico de Gallo:

  • 2 plum tomatoes, seeds and tough flesh removed, finely diced
  • 1 jalapeno, finely diced
  • 1/4 onion, finely diced
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • cilantro, finely chopped (about a tablespoon)
  • 1/2 lime, juiced
  • salt and pepper

For the Rice:

  • 1 cup coconut milk
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 tablespoons ginger, roughly chopped
  • 2 garlic cloves, roughly chopped
  • small bunch cilantro, chopped, stems reserved
  • 1/2 lime, juiced
  • 1 cup long grain rice (jasmine would also work well)
  • crispy shallots (see note below) *optional
  • salt and pepper

For the Flounder:

  • 1/4 cup all purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup coconut milk
  • 1/2 lime, juiced
  • 1/2 cup panko breadcrumbs
  • 2 flounder filets
  • salt and pepper
  • oil, for frying (canola works best)

Directions

  1. Prepare your mise en place. Measure out all of the necessary ingredients, cut your vegetables as instructed, and take out tools and cooking equipment.
  2. Make the pico de gallo. Place all listed ingredients into a small mixing bowl, season with salt and pepper, and let sit at room temperature as you continue cooking.  Preparing this first will allow it to develop flavor as you work.
  3. Add the coconut milk, water, ginger, garlic, cilantro stems, lime, and 2 teaspoons salt into a medium size sauce pan and bring to a boil. Once boiling, add in the rice, stir to incorporate, reduce to a simmer, and cover.  The rice should take about 20 minutes to cook through and will have a creamy texture, but all liquid should be absorbed.  Keep an eye on it for the last 5 minutes to ensure it doesn’t overcook and stick to the bottom of the pan.
  4. Remove chopped aromatics from the rice, fluff with a fork, and add chopped cilantro.  Season to taste with salt and pepper.  Cover and reserve.
  5. While the rice is nearing the end of cooking, setup your breading station for the flounder and remove the flounder from the fridge.  Place the flour on a plate, coconut milk and lime juice in a shallow bowl, and breadcrumbs on a plate and line up side by side.
  6. Season the flounder generously with salt and pepper on both sides. Coat both sides in the flour, shake off excess.  Dip both sides in coconut milk, shake off excess.  Coat both sides in breadcrumbs, shake off excess.  Place the breaded flounder on a clean plate.  Repeat breading process for each filet.
  7. Heat a saute pan over medium-high heat. Add enough oil to coat the pan and heat until you see slight ripples in the oil but before it starts to smoke.  If it’s too hot, it’s OK, remove from heat for a minute or two and let it cool before adding the flounder.
  8. When the oil is hot, place the filets in the pan making sure not to crowd them.  If the filets are larger, cook them one at a time.  Cook on the first side for 2-3 minutes.  The breadcrumbs should become golden, but not burnt, and the top side of the filet should begin to look opaque in color.  Flip and continue cooking on the opposite side another 2-3 minutes.  Flounder is very delicate so be sure to use a fish spatula or a flexible spatula to ensure you don’t break it.
  9. Place the cooked filets on a draining rack or on a plate with a paper towel to absorb any excess oil and maintain crispiness.
  10. To serve, arrange a bed of rice on the plate and top with crispy shallots (optional). Lay the flounder filet on top of one side of the rice, spoon the pico de gallo at the bottom of the plate, and garnish with a sprig of cilantro.

To make crispy shallots: Heat one tablespoon unsalted butter and 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil in a small saute pan over medium heat until it begins to bubble.  Reduce heat to low and add in one thinly sliced shallot. Cook over low heat for approximately 10 minutes, or until the shallots become golden brown.  Keep moving the pan around to ensure even cooking and that the shallots don’t burn.  Remove with a slotted spoon and drain on a paper towel. They can be stored in a plastic bag or airtight container for up to 2 days in the refrigerator.



Lessons from Top Chef Master Marcus Samuelsson

Chef Marcus and I

Award-winning chef and cookbook author Marcus Samuelsson recently stopped by FCI to share his take on global cuisine with students. Here is a taste of some of the many lessons and bites we explored.

Known most recently as the season 2 winner of Top Chef Masters, Chef Marcus’ rise to culinary fame came from his time as executive chef of New York City’s Aquavit, a world-renowned Scandinavian fine-dining restaurant.  Promoted to the prestigious post at only age 24, he has used his passion for both food and success to fuel his career, one that has given him the opportuity to cook for President Obama at his first State Dinner honoring the Prime Minister of India.

The auditorium filled up quickly with culinary and pastry students alike who were anxious to see the Top Chef Master in action, and of course try his food.  As soon as he reached the kitchen stage Chef Marcus was engaging and captivating.  He began the demo with a background on his life and journey to become a chef, starting with his upbringing in Sweden and education working as an apprentice in restaurants around Europe beginning at 18.  What I found to be most interesting is that as he was cooking in these very classic restaurants, he was discovering that technical perfection didn’t always equal great taste.  His intrigue with the American cooking scene and how chefs like Charlie Palmer, Bobby Flay, and Alice Waters were changing American cooking drove him to find a path here to the States.  The entire audience got a good laugh when Chef Marcus told the story of how he wrote letters to the only three people he knew in America to find work: David Letterman, Oprah Winfrey, and Hakan Swahn, owner of Aquavit.  Needless to say the only reply he received was from Swahn, and the rest is history.

Chef Marcus began a dialogue with the audience about how American food has evolved, with several students contributing factors such as economic changes, sustainability, access to new foods, and a growth of global dining choices.  While all were correct, he was most fascinated by how the internet has changed the way we cook.  I can certainly appreciate this being a food blogger, but it’s true.  As an internet culture, we can find a recipe in seconds, have a conversation about food on sites like Chowhound and FoodBuzz, and even watch cooking demonstrations live on YouTube.  Websites that were once meant only for news like CNN, Huffington Post, and Salon now have food sections.  The way we learn about food and how it has engaged people from all industries to take interest in it has taught Chef Marcus to focus more on teaching people about the process for cooking great food, not just the techniques.

Yellowfin Poke, prepared sushi style w/ spicy aioli

The discussion of American food led to the question of what is “New American” cuisine, a term that is so loosely used in today’s food culture.  While many would consider taking a classic dish from another culture and using “American” ingredients to be the answer, to Chef Marcus, “New American” is the introduction of regional specific cuisine to menus across the country.  A perfect example of this was his first dish, Yellowfin Tuna Poke Sushi, an interpretation of a very classic Hawaiian dish.  Hawaiian food is a blend of flavors from  Japan, the Pacific Islands, and the mainland, a completely different type of food then something you would find in say, Georgia. Introducing a dish like this to a restaurant in Athens, GA would be something new and different, but still very American.

Keeping with the topic of the changing landscape of American food, Chef Marcus brought up how American food has changed since the events of 9/11, the war, and the most recent economic recession.  His observation is that people are turning to comfort foods as we once did many years ago to cope with what is happening around us.  I think this viewpoint is spot on, but for more reasons than one.  Comfort food is what you want to eat to make you feel better emotionally, it satisfies a hunger both in our stomachs and our souls.  But what it also does is bring people together.  If I post on Facebook that I’m making a macaroni and cheese casserole tonight and I’d love some help eating it, you’d better believe my tiny apartment would be filled to the brim.  The idea of eating a gooey, cheesy dish with friends sounds like the best way to spend an evening.  That very idea alone brings comfort to people.

Coconut Lime Fried Chicken Wing w/ Spicy Ketchup

The appeal of comfort food is also credited to dollars and cents, in most cases comfort food is based upon less expensive ingredients.  Even at some of the fine dining restaurants in New York City cuts of meat like pork belly, pig ears, and flank steak are on the menu.  Tough cuts of meat and cheap grains require a lot of love to make them not only edible, but delicious, and the knowledge that someone put love and work into a meal is perhaps the most comforting thing of all.  Chef Marcus demonstrated one of his favorite comfort foods for us, fried chicken, and showed us how to take the often discarded chicken wing and give it big flavor. He poached his chicken wings in an aromatic liquid of coconut milk and lime juice and breaded and fried them in oil that had been flavored with garlic and herbs, building layers of flavor with each step.

Building a successful dish itself is something that takes time, practice, and patience for a chef.  The dishes you see on restaurant menus often times have been developed over several years before they are introduced to the masses.  One of the students in the audience asked Chef Marcus how long it takes him to come up with a dish, which led him to share his recipe development process with us.

His thought process is based upon a subject and follows a pyramid of steps, each one building off of the other.  It starts with the flavors he wants to incorporate, followed by the aesthetic, the fragrance, the texture, then the regional technique to be used to bring it all together.  The genius behind Chef Marcus really came to light as he demonstrated this exercise.  As we called out ingredients he would rattle off dishes in seconds incorporating all of the steps I previously listed.  It is important to note however, that while he can come up with the idea in a flash, it often takes him 1-2 years to really perfect it.

Foie Gras Ganache w/ Cranberry Chutney

We had the opportunity to watch as he prepared one of his most well-known dishes that was developed for the State Dinner at the White House, Foie Gras Ganache.  This dish was tested many times with fellow Scandinavian chef and FCI VP Chef Nils Noren until they found the perfect consistency and balance of flavors.  They actually worked backwards based on examples of foie gras he didn’t like to come up with what he had envisioned in his head.  The end result was a smooth and decadent mouse-like foie gras that was served alongside a tart cranberry chutney to balance out the richness of the dish.  This was actually my first time trying foie gras and I’m afraid I’ve been spoiled, the chances of me trying a dish that is not only good enough for the President and Prime Minister of India, but to win Top Chef Masters, are unlikely.

There were many takeaways from the time Chef Marcus spent with us, most importantly I learned that the skills and techniques that we are learning in school are of vital importance to becoming a professional chef, but more important than that is having the creative mind to think about food and dishes in a composed way.  Food is a conversation and a comfort, one that needs to hit on all senses for your diners.  As I continue to develop recipes and think about food, I will follow Chef Marcus’s approach to building flavors around a subject and making sure all the senses are satisfied.

Chef Marcus Samuelsson’s next big project is the opening of the Red Rooster in Harlem, NY, a revival of the famous speakeasy from the early 1900′s, featuring fresh, local soul food.  Scheduled to open sometime in the second half of this year, it will be an exciting addition to the neighborhood and an incentive for New Yorker’s to go uptown.  To learn more about Chef Marcus, visit his website at http://marcussamuelsson.com

Plan the perfect Valentine’s Day menu

Photo courtesy Sister72“I have made a lot of mistakes falling in love, and regretted most of them, but never the potatoes that went with them.”
Nora Ephron

Love is in the air friends, and whether you are madly in love with another or still searching for them there is no excuse not to pay homage to one of our greatest love’s of all this Valentine’s Day: food!

Celebrating Hallmark’s biggest holiday tends to create stress amongst couples and singles alike.  If you’re in a relationship, it’s the decision to eat out, stay in, or pretend like the holiday doesn’t exist.  If you’re single, the question turns to staying in to watch love stories and sulk, embrace single-hood and party it up at a bar with friends, or go out on a mission to find mr./mrs. right.  While I am no Oprah, Dr. Laura, Dr. Ruth or other self-help guru I do know one thing, nothing brings people together like food.

I am of course partial to this argument, but my advice to you this year is to plan a romantic meal at home for your partner, or throw a fun dinner party for friends and take time out from the craziness that is the restaurant industry this time of year.  I have compiled some of my favorite recipes to create menu options for everyone from the novice cook to the next Food Network star, and those in between. Cooking for someone else is one of the most sincere expressions of love and with a little bit of planning you can wow your Valentine, or Valentine’s, this year with a meal fit for Aphrodite.

Tips

  • Know your limitations.  Showing someone your love by burning a dish or being so tired because you spent 8 hours learning how to cook something is not the goal here.  Make sure you select a menu that suits your skills and abilities in the kitchen.
  • Set the mood.  Candles are of course a nice touch, but so is music.  Some of my favorite romantic music choices are the sounds of a French cafe.  Look for artists like Melody Gardot, Carla Bruni, Norah Jones, and Van Morrison.  Pandora’s French Cafe Radio is an easy way to pump in the sounds of love.  Having an I Hate Valentine’s Day party? Alanis Morissette always works well :)
  • Wash as you go.  The worst part of cooking at home is doing the dishes and it’s a chore you, your valentine or your guests won’t want to do.  As you are preparing your dishes be sure to clean as you go so that at the end of the night clean up will be minimal and you can enjoy the evening.
  • Don’t be afraid to cheat.  On the meal that is!  If you know you don’t have the patience for preparing one of the items listed below, try a store bought alternative to help you save time, as long as you don’t tell them it’s store bought no one has to know.
  • Mix and match.  Love one of these menus but not one item in particular? Don’t be afraid to mix and match or add in a personal favorite.

Menu #1: The Steakhouse

If you or your partners idea of a great meal involves going to Ruth’s Chris, Morton’s or some other high end steak house, try this menu and you will be amazed at not only the quality, but the savings!

Wedge Salad

Petite Filet with Gorgonzola and Porcini Mushroom Sauce

Pommes Frites with Parsley Butter

Parmesan-Roasted Broccoli

Chocolate Truffle Tarts with Raspberries

Menu #2: The Bistro

Transport you and your Valentine to a quaint bistro with this classic menu.

Mixed Green Salad

Perfect Roast Chicken

Lemon-Butter Green Beans with Pine Nuts

Potato Pave

French Apple Tart

Menu #3: The Italian Feast

Italian is the language of love and this meal will say all the right things.  Warning, this meal will take some time to prepare.

Roasted Tomato Caprese Salad

Pappardelle Bolognese *note, you can certainly substitute store bought pasta here, but try at home if looking for a real challenge

Tiramisu

Menu #4: The Novice Chef

Does the thought of cooking a meal for someone you love scare you?  Try this simple menu and you will impress even yourself.  I won’t call it fool-proof because honestly, how can anyone claim that, but I’d be surprised if you ruined this one :)

Roasted Chicken Purses

Pork Milanese with Portobello Mushroom Risotto *mushroom risotto can be bought in a kit at the grocery store, try the Alessi brand

Roasted Asparagus

Chocolate Covered Strawberries

Menu# 5: The Fresh Catch

If the ocean and all it’s bounty is what you love, then try this seafood themed menu.

Fennel, Mushroom and Arugula Salad with Seared Scallops

Salt-Baked Sea Bass with Warm Tomato Vinaigrette

Roasted New Potatoes

Creme Brulee

Need wine pairing suggestions? Check out Real Simple’s nifty wine pairing guide and you will find the perfect wine to accompany your romantic feast.

I hope that this weekend brings you a grand excuse to prepare a fabulous meal, and if you are lucky in love, a romantic night to share together.

Bon Appetit!


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