The troops have been hankering for rainbow trout, so we had them today. I picked up four fish (cleaned) at Costco and served them whole. This is an easy dish to make and delicious but it can be a mess if you don’t have a large griddle or sauté pan since the head and tail will hang over the edges and flour will get all over. Wash and dry the fish well on the outside but only slightly on the outside, salt the inside and then dredge in salt and peppered flour. I use a half sheet pan for this and leave them on there until they go into the pan. Get out your largest stick-free sauté pan and heat up some olive oil. When it’s nice and hot but not an inferno, put in a knob of butter. Gently lay in a fish and brown it — watching the heat so it does not burn. Turn it over with long tongs after about 5 minutes and brown the other side. Slide a large spatula (a commercial one is good for this kind of thing) under the fish and move to an oiled sheet pan, leaving room for any others you want to put on there. Do not use the tongs to take the fish out of the sauté pan because it will break. Before you fry another fish make sure the oil in the sauté pan is not burned. If it is, pour it out and wipe with a paper towel when cool enough and start with fresh oil and butter. When you have all your fish on the sheet pan place in a 375 F. convection oven and bake for 15 minutes – if you have fish that are about a pound or so each. If you have small fish you’ll need very little bake time. Apply good judgment here. If you have a sauté pan that is able to house a couple of fish with no overhang, there is no reason to finish them in the oven. After you turn the fish over and brown side #2, simply turn down the heat, tent some foil over the pan, and cook for 10 minutes or so and serve. I find this recipe the best since this is a mild fish and you want to bring out its goodness without a lot of overpowering ingredients. We eat them with a squeeze of lemon. The bones are not too bad on a rainbow trout, but try to eat any whole fish by sliding the meat down from the backbone on the side facing you. When done with that side, pull off the entire backbone and eat the side left on your plate. There is a little meat you can get from the tail, and be sure to eat the cheek meat and whatever else you can find in the head before you discard it. The skin is the best part of a fried trout – enjoy it! Debone meat for your smaller kids, but know that if you get them used to this kind of preparation they won’t know from a fish stick and this is what they’ll want when they get older. While there is no one, but no one, who is as good with fish bones as my mother, my son, Matthew, now 21, can hold his own because he has been eating whole fish all his life.
Tag Archives: american cuisine
Tie-dye glaze for cakes
Steven’s birthday and Mother’s Day today, resulting in efficiency or someone being “screwed,” and I would say that this is Steven, since he has to share his special day with a lesser event. He requested some sort of pound cake so I made that with strawberries and whipped cream. I gave the cake a tie-dye glaze, in honor of Steve’s childhood in the 60’s and 70’s. This is easy. You need: food coloring kit; lemon juice; confectioner’s sugar; 6 glass custard cups (or other cups that won’t absorb the colors); a fully cooled pound cake. Place your cake on a large piece of foil or a sheet pan. Mix 2 cups of confectioner’s sugar with a little lemon juice. Add more lemon juice until you have a very thick glaze. If the glaze is too thin it will dry transparently on the cake and all this will have been for naught. Divide your glaze evenly among the custard cups. Make red, yellow, blue and green, which are the colors that come with basic food coloring sets, by adding a couple of drops of color to each cup of glaze and then mixing with a teaspoon. Make orange with some red and yellow. Make purple (and this is a must) from red and green. Using a clean spoon, spoon the purple glaze on the top of the cake, at intervals, so it runs down both sides and so you wind up with four or five strips of purple. Do this with the other colors, one at a time, on the clean parts of the cake, overlapping now and again for a tie-dye effect. Allow icing to harden completely before moving. Cakes like this are good served with basic strawberry topping, which you can make by washing, stemming and cutting up strawberries (to your liking, i.e., sliced or quartered), and tossing with a good dose of sugar and a few drops of lemon juice. Cover with plastic wrap, pop in fridge, and in a few hours you’ll have strawberries in syrup to serve over cake slices. The cake and fixin’s were a big hit – especially with Berry, who kept a close eye on the operation.
Zucchini bread
I’ve been famous for my zucchini bread since 1977. When I lived in Northeastern Pennsylvania, I collected local recipes. Many of them, like this one, are popular in the recipe belt that runs from mid-PA through upstate NY. This quick bread is moist and delicious, containing both shredded zucchini and crushed pineapple – but you won’t taste either in the finished product. This is an idiot-proof recipe that makes a great gift. Why be a fool who pays through the nose for something that is easy to make at home? Try to find the little, baby, zucchini, so all you have to do it peel and won’t have to worry about scraping out seeds. I implore you to bake this. Then email me and tell me how much you love it! If you are a young person who wants to make something to bring to a meal this holiday season, this is your chance to impress.
Thanksgiving 2007
Happy Thanksgiving! We made a wonderful turkey, stuffing with chestnuts and sausage, mashed Yukon Gold potatoes with plenty o’cream and butter, and some steamed fresh green beans. We always make a large turkey so we have leftovers for turkey curry and turkey and stuffing sandwiches on Acme sourdough rolls. In the interest of frugality and a good soup, the carcass is used to make congee. Turkey congee is easy-peasy to make: in a clay pot or Dutch oven, put in one turkey carcass, one and a half cups of any white rice, 15 cups of cold water, one small knob of peeled ginger and two whole scallions. Bring to a boil and then simmer for about three hours. If you use a clay pot, use a flame tamer. Stir up from the bottom every half hour or so. All to cool enough to remove the bones, ginger and scallions. Stir in 1/4 cup soy sauce. Heat back up to serving temperature. Serve in bowls with some chopped green onion, salted peanuts and a drizzle of toasted sesame oil on top.
The $3 cupcake
I baked my version of the $3.00 cupcake today using the sour cream cake recipe from The Ebony Cookbook (1978), by Freda DeKnight, and a basic milk chocolate buttercream recipe from school. Just to be interesting I used pans with odd shapes, like a ghost mini cake pan that springs into action every Halloween. The cake was a bit rubbery so next time I’ll try a pound cake batter; most cupcake batters are just too soft for my taste. Incidentally, this is one great cookbook. No pictures, but a treasure of recipes, especially if you want to make things like coffee cakes and biscuits. Plenty of good ideas for chicken, too.