Thursday, June 28, 2012

Spicy Salmon Tartar with Plaintain Chips

Jamie found this one in his most recent CCA magazine and, with all certainty, knew it would be a hit at our house.  Haven't tried it yet, but it's on the agenda for this weekend!


 Later.........

 WOAH!  We tried this one!  Amazing.  This is definitely going to be a favorite!  My only comment is the amount of sauce the recipe makes is WAY MORE than you need for 1 1/2 lbs of salmon.  So, I'd suggest making the sauce according to the recipe, then adding it, one spoonful at a time, to the chopped salmon until you reach the "sauce level" that looks yummy to you.

The sauce...

 Sauce and chopped salmon...



Also, the recipe didn't give instructions for making the green salad below the tartar in the picture in the recipe.  I don't know if this is it or not, but it definitely did the trick.  One small bag of plain shredded lettuce and one avocado. 

Add about 3/4 of the avocado to the lettuce and stir thoroughly.  Any chunks in the avocado will turn to mush, covering the lettuce.  The last 1/4, cube it in the skin like below.


Then scoop it out in layers.  This will create nice little "chunks" of avocado.  Mix this into the salad gently to make some tasty avocado bites.


Again, mix the sauce slowly into the chopped salmon.  And, no - the cat food isn't included in this recipe. ;)


Now for the perfect round shape.  Not happening if I have to do that by hand.  The right tool for the job?  A cookie/biscuit cutter or piece of 3"-4" pvc pipe.  My biscuit cutter wasn't very tall, so I added the green salad, then slid the cutter up a little, so I'd still have a mold when adding the salmon.


The finished product!


Homer-approved.



Friday, June 15, 2012

Cucumber Sandwiches...from OUR GARDEN!

The time has finally arrived!  Our garden has begun producing food large enough to eat!  The first harvest produced 3 jalapenos, 2 bell peppers, 2 (of some other kind of bell pepper looking pepper), one large cucumber (which is almost as round as it is long and a funny yellow color), one Japanese eggplant, and one small cherry tomato.


I totted the veggies all the way to Port O'Connor and back, hoping to use them on our long stay at the coast.  No such luck.  The only one that met it's demise was the eggplant - I introduced Jamie to Meme's famous fried eggplant.  Needless to say, he was an immediate fan.


So, returning home with our first batch of home-grown garden veggies reaching almost a week old, I had to find something to do with them.  While at the grocery store, browsing the cheese section, it hit me...cucumber dill sandwiches!  These were another first for Jamie and, once again, he's a big fan!  Our fat little cucumber has (so far) made 4 sandwiches - one for each of us for dinner the last two nights!







This is our sandwich, served with half of one of the not-bell-pepper-looking-peppers and a hot red cherry pepper (picked after we returned home).  The red pepper turned out to be so spicy that, instead of just eating them raw, on the side, we stuck the slices into the sandwich, which worked very well!

And, with peppers and HEB corn & bean pico...


Super Easy Basalmic Honey Redfish on the Half Shell

On our last trip to Port O'Connor, Jamie caught a VERY nice Redfish.  We found a recipe for this balsamic honey marinade/glaze - super easy and equally yummy.

Equal parts balsamic vinegar and honey
A little garlic
A little olive oil

Marinade for about 30 minutes, transfer the fish to a pan and place under the broiler for 12 minutes.  While the fish cooks, transfer the marinade to a pot and reduce on the stove to create a thicker glaze.  When the fish is finished, pour the glaze over the fish and serve!

We cooked the fish skin on, which I think works best with the hot, fast cooking that happens under the broiler.