Wholemeal salmon sandwich and tartar sauce

salmon

Wholemeal salmon sandwich and tartar sauce

This is another of our Spanish recipes that we have dug out of our databases. It is a simple summer sandwich of smoked salmon in a mayonaise sauce, accompanied by a mixture of vegetables. The last time we made it we used a mixture of sweet pickled olives, onions,gherkins and peppers on a little wooden skewer. Ideal for a summer afternoon snack with a (large) glass of rioja.

• 8 slices of wholemeal bread
• 1 carrot
• 4 slices of smoked salmon
• 4 broccoli florets
• 4 florets of cauliflower

For the tartar sauce

• Olive oil
• 1 tablespoon sherry vinegar
• 1 egg
• 4 pickled gherkins
• 1 tablespoon dill Dijon mustard
• 2 anchovy fillets
• 1 tablespoon capers
• vinegar
• parsley
• 1 onion
• Salt

Peel carrots, cut into slices and boil along with the cauliflower and broccoli florets in a saucepan with salted water, for 6-7 minutes. Drain.

Place the egg in a blender with 150 ml of olive oil, vinegar, mustard and anchovy fillets. Beat in a blender until emulsified.

Add a sprig of chopped parsley, gherkins, capers and scallions. Spread the sauce on the bread pan, top with the Salmon and cover sandwich with another slice of bread. Cut in half making two triangles and serve with vegetables.

Can be prepared without bread. Mix the vegetables with the salmon cut into strips and serve with sauce. Many other Mayonnaise sauces, such as this Tatar sauce, can be made – cocktail sauce or dill sauce, prepared by adding a little mustard and chopped dill, and that goes very well in this recipe also.


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Feasting with fabulous Floyd

floyd

Feasting with fabulous Floyd

Of all the celebrity chefs, Kith Floyd was my favourite. My life in cooking was inspired by Keith Floyd, Gary Rhodes and Rick Stein. This little story about Keith and some of his recipes sums him up exactly. This then, is the spanishchef tribute to a fabulous celebrity chef – Kieth Floyd. He will be missed by all good food lovers.

Clarissa Porter looks back at the life of a true Englishman who relished wit, good food and loyal company. From Bristol to rural Devon, to the countryside of Ireland and the world’s TV studios – Floyd was the quintessential cook for all taste-obsessed traditionalists.

Where to begin? I could write a book about my time with Keith Floyd. Back in the late- 1980s I was asked by a magazine, along with my photographer husband David, to ‘try out’ working with Keith Floyd. If successful there would be a weekly cookery spread with Keith. We had already ’tried out’ cooking with a pop star, a chat show host, and a chef from Buckingham Palace. The latter resulted in an injunction from the Palace stopping any publication of Her Majesty’s favourite recipes. A narrow escape; I was dreading endlessly piping mashed potato around the rather bland offerings from the ex-royal chef.

“Money’s no object,” said the editor, “it has to be the best you can make it.” Floyd was at the height of his success, but in the curious world of business one-upmanship, it was decreed he would come to us, rather than the other way around. So we hired a house on Blackheath with a spectacular kitchen, and Keith arrived in a limousine we’d sent to pick him up, hot, tired and a bit grumpy after a five-hour drive from Devon.

We were in awe of him, intimidated by his fame and volatile reputation. Keith cooked chicken with cider, and from Floyd on Fish, a trout baked in newspaper. Consternation! Keith insisted it be wrapped in The News of The World. We arranged for a motorbike messenger to collect a copy from the paper’s offices, and cooking began. It seemed to go well, if a bit awkwardly. Keith said: “Next time, my house! We could be a bloody good team.” The magazine liked the pictures of the food and Keith cooking, so we were hired for a year, driving backwards and forwards to Devon at least once a week, sometimes more.

For all you Floyd lovers out there, and indeed for all those of you who have never heard of Keith Floyds (RIP) Here are just a few of his famous recipes.

floyd

Trout baked in newspaper


Chicken roasted with garlic

If I ever feel the need to impress a dinner party with the minimum of effort, this is the recipe I choose. When this spectacular dish appeared in Floyd on France in 1987, it was greeted with gasps of surprise. So many cloves of garlic! Keith treated the garlic as a vegetable. “They are truly delicious,” he said, “just pick them up with your fingers and eat them whole!” Keith always insisted on a corn-fed free range chicken, years ahead of his time.

Serves 4
1 corn-fed chicken 1.75 kg (4 lb.)
salt and pepper
Juice of 1 lemon
1 kg (900 g) plump cloves of garlic, half of the quantity peeled
1 bay leaf
1 sprig of thyme
Olive oil
1 glass of dry white wine

Method:
Wipe the chicken then rub it all over inside and out with salt and pepper. Squeeze the lemon juice over the outside and into the cavity. Stuff the chicken using the 450 g (1 lb.) peeled garlic and the thyme and bay leaf. Quickly brown the chicken in a frying pan with some olive oil. Then put the bird in a roasting tin breast side down. Put in your oven preheated to 180°C (350°F, gas 4) and cook for about 30 minutes. Take the tin from the oven, turn the chicken onto its back, add the unpeeled garlic and a couple of tablespoons of olive oil. Baste the chicken and return to the oven and cook for another 1 – 1 1/2 hours, approximately. When the chicken is cooked, place on a warmed serving dish with the roasted garlic cloves. Add the glass of wine to the juices in the roasting tin and allow to bubble for a minute or two. Season with salt and pepper and drizzle over the dish. Keith served this with some fresh bread and nothing else, I like it with a simple green side salad.

Rabbit with Prunes

Keith’s fourth restaurant, ‘Floyd’s’ in Chandos Road Bristol, opened with the help of the ’500 Club’, 6 friends who all stumped up £500 to help Keith get back in business. Here he met David Pritchard a TV producer who asked Keith to do a 5 minute cooking slot on “RPM”, an arty early evening TV show. Feeding four people for a pound was the idea but Keith admitted he never costed it. He was paid £10 for this first appearance when he cooked this dish from Floyd in The Soup: rabbit with prunes.

Serves 4
1 rabbit, jointed into 6 pieces; wild rabbit preferably
50g (2 oz) butter
20 very small onions
100g (4 oz) smoked bacon, diced
Thyme, to season
300ml (1/2 pint) dry white wine
225g (1/2 lb.) soaked prunes
1 measure of brandy
Salt and pepper
1 heaped teaspoon strong mustard powder

Method:
Season the rabbit joints and quickly brown in melted butter in a frying pan. Then in the same butter brown the onions and diced bacon and put to one side. Sprinkle the mustard over the rabbit and put the joints, onions, bacon and thyme into a casserole dish and cover with the wine. Cook for about 1 hour at 180°C (350°F, gas 4). Then add the prunes and the brandy and cook for about a further 30 minutes. You can freeze this dish.

Trout in newspaper

This is the first recipe I cooked with Keith, from his book Floyd on Fish. Something of a novelty dish, but very tasty. Keith in his usual mischievous way thought you could embarrass or insult your friends by the choice of newspaper. In his book he says he would naturally use The Times, but when he saw me he insisted I send for a copy of The News of the World. What did he mean?

Per person
1 trout about 175g (6 oz), cleaned and gutted
2 sheets of newspaper
Bouquet of fresh herbs per fish
Slice of lemon per fish
Yoghurt sauce
For the yoghurt sauce
300ml (1/2pt) plain natural yoghurt
3 tbsp peeled and finely chopped cucumber
1 tablespoon chives, chopped
1/2 teaspoon of concentrated mint sauce
Juice of half a lemon
Salt and pepper

METHOD
First, make the sauce by mixing together all the ingredients and chilling in the fridge. Then stuff each fish with the herbs and a thin slice of lemon. Wrap an envelope of newspaper around the fish, tightly, and run under a cold tap till soaked through but intact. Place in an oven pre-heated to 180°C (350°F, gas 4) until the paper is completely dry. It should take about 7 or 8 minutes, and if you tap it should sound hollow. Remove from the oven — and carefully. It is hot, so cut open the envelope using scissors. Peel off the paper which should remove the skin at the same time. You may find it difficult to do this neatly. Practice makes perfect! Serve with yoghurt sauce. Will not freeze.

Oxtail with grapes

In Feast of Floyd under the heading ‘Eat More Meat’, Keith worried about the ‘brown rice conspiracy’ and the country turning to vegetarianism. He reckoned that the Government ought to make oxtail stew compulsory at Heathrow Airport, so that tourists could have at least one decent meal when they arrive! A dish that can, and indeed should, be made the day before. Oxtail is cheap and delicious but a little fatty. By making this a day early you can skim off the fat before you reheat and serve.

Serves 6
1.3kg (3Ib) oxtail, jointed
1 tbsp vegetable oil
25g (1oz) butter
1 large onion, diced
2 large carrots, finely diced
1 clove of garlic, chopped
1 large wine glass of sherry
1 tbsp of tomato purée
1 bay leaf
1 tsp chopped thyme
1 tbsp chopped parsley
Salt
Fresh ground black pepper
450g (1 Ib) seedless grapes

METHOD
Remove any excess fat from the oxtail and wash then dry. In a heavy pan, heat together the oil and butter, then brown the meat with the onion, carrots and garlic. Strain off any fat and then pour in the sherry and flame. Stir in the tomato purée and then add the herbs. Season to your taste with salt and pepper and add cold water to cover. Bring to the boil, cover with a lid and cook very slowly for two hours, or more. When the oxtail is cooked and tender, remove from the heat and cool. Skim off any fat from the surface and discard the bay leaf. When you are ready to serve, add the grapes and gently warm up the dish until the fruit softens, allow 10-15 minutes. You can freeze this dish before you add the grapes.


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Fish - Where Fishermen See Stars

seafood

Fish – Where Fishermen See Stars

For some travelers, it’s at Exit 70, the gateway off the Long Island Expressway. For others, it’s passing Linda Scott’s enormous steel sculpture of a deer, “Stargazer,” in Manorville, or at the first glimpse of open water in Hampton Bays. But the best milestone might be the weathered blue nautical sign for the Seafood Shop in Wainscott and its promise of exuberant beach clambakes, fish fries and oysters bursting with the taste of the ocean.

For 40 years, the Seafood Shop has offered some of the freshest fish on the East End, served up from a squat storefront right beside the Montauk Highway. Steel-and-glass cases line the spare rectangular room, filled deep with whole fish on ice, fillets and shellfish. Tanks brim with live lobsters. A center island holds produce and fragrant herbs. Blue crabs from nearby Georgica Pond, brought in by Harry Lester, age 80-something, fill a plastic bin on the checkered blue-and-white tile floor.

Much of this haul still comes straight from the source. Fishermen come and go through the back door, bringing in the latest catch to be sold or packed in ice and sent to the commercial market in Hunts Point in the Bronx.

“I got porgies, bluefish and fluke, still flapping!” Charles Niggles said as he backed into the rear warehouse on a recent Sunday morning.

A different kind of local takes the front door. Colin Mather, the store’s owner, is on a first-name basis with his customers, whether Jimmy (Buffett), Richard (Gere), Martha (Stewart) or Ina (Garten).

“I’ve shopped here for years,” said Gary Wachtel, a regular visitor, explaining the appeal. “Even though the store is supposed to close at 6:30, they stay open later. The fish is fresh and local, and the people warm and accommodating.”

Mr. Mather, 43, grew up nearby but wasn’t born to his trade. “If you’d told me as a boy that I would work in the fish industry,” he said, “I’d have answered, ‘Are you nuts?’ ”

When he was 10, a flounder bone that became lodged in his throat landed him in the hospital. “It took a while for me to eat fish again,” he said.

But when Mr. Mather tried to join the Marines in 1987, he said, “they didn’t take me because of my flat feet.” That didn’t prevent him from helping out at the Seafood Shop, shucking oysters and steaming lobsters. Later, he traveled a bit but kept coming back, and he ended up working there full time. In 2000, he took over the business from John Haessler, an original co-founder.

Even as the Hamptons have changed — fewer fishing boats, more yachts — the Seafood Shop really hasn’t that much. Mr. Mather worries about sustainability now, and customers eat more of his fish raw. This year he hired an actual chef, but he might face a mutiny if he tinkers with the thick and delicious chowders.

The sports cars keep pulling up in front, the pickup trucks around back; and the Seafood Shop continues to embody the region’s salty past and its celebrity present. At few places do fishermen and film stars rub shoulders more often.

“I remember the first time Roy Scheider came in,” Mr. Mather said the other day, reminiscing about the “Jaws” leading man. “I was completely star-struck, and he saw it. So, with a twinkle in his eye, he looked straight at me and said, ‘I think I’ll have the shark today.’ ”


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Snapper and spaghetti

Snapper and spaghetti

Roast snapper with a herb crust.

Roast snapper with a herb crust.

The Australasian snapper or Pagrus auratus is a species of porgie found in coastal waters of New Zealand and Australia. Although it is almost universally known in these countries as snapper it does not belong to the Lutjanidae family. It is highly prized as an eating fish.

The misha fish is found on all coasts of New Zealand, especially in the north. In Australia it is found along the south coast and as far north as Coral Bay in the west, and Cape Manifold in Queensland in the east. It is also found on the coast of Tasmania but in smaller numbers. The fish spawn in inshore waters and live in rocky areas and reefs of up to 200 m deep. They school, and will migrate between reefs. Larger fish are known to enter estuaries and harbours, for example Port Phillip Bay has a renowned seasonal snapper run.

Growth rates within the wild vary with some stocks (i.e. the Hauraki Gulf, NZ) growing rapidly and to a smaller maximum length while stocks in east and west Australia are known to grow much slower, a 10 kg adult is probably 20 years old, and a fish at the maximum size of 1.3 m long and 20 kg is probably 50 years old. Sexual maturity is reached at about 30 cm long and a small percentage of the males will turn into females at puberty.

Anglers are advised not to take immature fish, so as not to reduce breeding stock. The legal size in Australia varies by state, from 35 cm and a bag limit of 5 fish per person in Queensland to 50 cm in Western Australia. During spawing, these fish will obtain a metallic green sheen which indicates a high concentration of acid build up within the scales’ infrastructure. Minimum sizes are supposed to be designed to allow these fish to participate in spawning runs at least once before they become available to the fishery, however given the slow growth rates of this species, there is need to consider area closures and/or further increasing the minimum sizes in each state to reduce the chances of growth overfishing of the various populations of snapper throughout its range. This may be important with recent developments in technology such as GPS.

So simple to prepare, so quick to cook – it’s hard to go past fresh seafood for an easy, delicious dinner.

ROAST SNAPPER WITH A HERB CRUST

2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1/2 brown onion, finely diced
2 cloves garlic, finely diced
1 cup fresh breadcrumbs
2 tbsp chopped ginger
1 tsp coriander seeds, roasted and roughly pounded
3 tbsp chopped coriander leaves
3 tbsp chopped flat-leaf parsley leaves
3 tbsp chopped chives
1 tbsp grated lemon zest (make sure there is no bitter pith)
sea salt and freshly ground pepper
90g unsalted butter, softened
800g snapper fillet, skin off
lemon wedges, to serve

Serves 4

Preheat the oven to 200°C.

To make the herb crust, heat the olive oil in a frying pan over medium heat. Add the onion and garlic and sweat for 5 minutes, or until soft. Remove from the pan and transfer to a stainless-steel bowl. Add the breadcrumbs, ginger, coriander seeds and leaves, parsley, chives, lemon zest, sea salt and a good grind of pepper. Mix thoroughly, add the butter and mix again. It should start to come together.

On a chopping board, squash the crust mixture into a square that is slightly larger than the fish fillet. Lay the fish, presentation side down, on the crust mixture and cut the fish and its coating into 4 pieces. Slide a fish slice under the first piece, carefully turn the fish and its coating over and place in a roasting tin, crust side up. Repeat with remaining portions. Pour 1/2 cup water into the roasting tin and cook in the oven for 10 minutes, or until a thin metal skewer slides easily into the fish.

Carefully place 1 fish portion on each plate and squeeze fresh lemon juice over the crust. Serve immediately.

 

SPAGHETTI WITH MUSSELS, PRAWNS AND CHILLI

snapper

1/4 cup dry white wine
1kg large black mussels, scrubbed and de-bearded
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 small dried chillies, crumbled
8 green (raw) king prawns, peeled
1/4 cup flat-leaf parsley, chopped, plus extra
sea salt and freshly ground pepper
400g dried spaghetti

Serves 4

Place the wine in a saucepan over medium-high heat and add the mussels. Cover and steam the mussels for 4-5 minutes until they open; remove opened mussels from the pan. Strain and reserve the mussel juice.

Add half the olive oil to the saucepan. When hot, add the garlic, chilli and prawns. Cook until opaque, about 2 minutes, then add the mussels, strained juice, parsley and the remaining olive oil and check the seasoning. The water from the mussels may be salty enough; if not, add a little salt and freshly ground pepper.

Meanwhile, cook the spaghetti in plenty of boiling salted water for 8 minutes, or until al dente. Drain and mix through the mussel and prawn sauce. Spoon the sauce and pasta into 4 pasta bowls and serve immediately, sprinkled with extra chopped parsley.

 

HOT TIPS

• The mussel and prawn dish is everything that is great about Italian cooking: simple and delicious. The juices from the mussels make a great sauce mixed with chilli, garlic and olive oil. Be careful to check on the salt content of the mussel juice, though, as you don’t want it too salty. Clams can also be used. Another wonderful addition is toasted breadcrumbs for crunch.

• Any white-fleshed fish or ocean trout is wonderful with a herb crust. Not only does the crust give the fish great flavour but, importantly, it keeps it moist during cooking.

• A thick fennel or zucchini soup would make a wonderful sauce for this fish dish. Just add a salad and small boiled and buttered spuds.

 

SOMETHING TO DRINK

Rosé
Keep the flavours of the spaghetti vibrant with a glass of Turkey Flat Rosé (about $25), from South Australia’s Barossa Valley. It’s predominantly made from grenache, with a good splash of cabernet sauvignon, shiraz and dolcetto. Aromas of raspberry and rhubarb give way to a juicy, rounded palate and fresh finish.

 

Source: Good Weekend
For regular updates on upcoming stories and events visit the Good Weekend Facebook page. 

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Korean Seafood May be Contaminated with Norovirus

FOOD SAFETY WARNING – Korean Seafood May be Contaminated with Norovirus

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is urging stores and restaurants in the US to stop selling imported Korean oysters, clams, mussels and some types of scallops because they may be contaminated with the norovirus.

“These seafood products and any products made with them may have been exposed to human fecal waste and are potentially contaminated with norovirus,” the FDA said Thursday.

Korea’s seafood-safety program no longer meets FDA standards, the agency said. A recent FDA evaluation found problems with Korean sanitation controls that allowed human fecal material to contaminate seafood production in the country.

Korean government officials said they will strengthen the monitoring of seafood production facilities, tighten sanitation controls and ask the FDA to review its position.

“We know there are some sanitation problems at some seafood production facilities. We will increase the monitoring of seafood production facilities and take action if needed,” according to Ahn Chi-gook, an official at the Ministry for Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries.

Ahn said the government plans to ask the FDA to review its stance in time for the high season for oysters and other seafood in October.

Imports from Korea make up only a small portion of US seafood consumption, according to the FDA.

“FDA is in ongoing discussions with Korean authorities to resolve the issue,” the agency said.

The norovirus can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and stomach cramping, and symptoms usually appear 12 to 48 hours after exposure, the FDA said.

No human illnesses this year in the US have been linked to imported Korean seafood.

Read more: The Wall Street Journal

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Diabetes Quick Fix: Mixed Seafood Kebobs With Quick Brown Rice

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Diabetes Quick Fix: Mixed Seafood Kebobs With Quick Brown Rice

Kabobs with a mixture of seafood and colorful vegetables make a quick, flavorful dinner. I chose shrimp and scallops for their texture and flavor. Zucchini and yellow squash add color and crispness. These kebobs need only 5 minutes to cook. The pieces will be crisp outside and moist and tender inside.

Helpful Hints:

You can use any type of seafood.

Leave about -inch between the ingredients on the skewer to allow for even cooking.

Make sure the stove-top grill is hot before cooking the seafood kebobs. A broiler can be used instead of a grill.

Countdown:

Preheat stove-top grill.

Marinate fish and vegetables.

Make rice.

Cook kebobs.

SEAFOOD KEBOBS

2 tablespoons lime juice

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 clove garlic, crushed

1/8 teaspoon salt

1/4 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper

1 teaspoon dried dill

12 large peeled, deveined shrimp (6 ounces)

7 large sea scallops (6 ounces)

1 medium zucchini cut into 1-inch pieces (2 cups)

1 medium yellow squash cut into 1-inch pieces (2 cups)

4 skewers

Preheat stove-top grill. Mix lime juice, olive oil, garlic, salt, pepper and dill together. Add shrimp, scallops and vegetables and set aside to marinate for 15 minutes. Turn once during this time.

Alternate the vegetables, shrimp, and scallops on the skewers. Place on a stove-top grill for 2 -minutes per side. Do not overcook the fish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste. Place skewers on two dinner plates or remove seafood and vegetables from skewers onto 2 plates and serve. Makes 2 servings.

Per serving: 224 calories, 5 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 157 mg cholesterol, 34 g protein, 12 g carbohydrates, 4 g dietary fiber, 7 g sugars, 314 mg sodium.

Exchanges/Choices: 2 vegetable, 4 lean meat, 1/2 fat

QUICK BROWN RICE

1/2 cup quick-cooking brown rice

2 teaspoons olive oil

Salt and fresh ground black pepper

Fill a medium saucepan halfway with cold water and add the rice. Bring water to a boil and gently boil rice for about 30 minutes. Test a few grains to see if they are cooked through but still firm. Drain leaving a little water on the rice. With a fork, stir in the oil and add salt and pepper to taste. Serve with the kebobs. Makes 2 servings.

Per serving: 210 calories, 6 g fat, 1 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 5 g protein, 35 g carbohydrates, 2 g dietary fiber, 0 g sugars, 3 mg sodium.

Exchanges/Choices: 2 1/2 starch, 1/2 fat

SHOPPING LIST

Here are the ingredients you’ll need for tonight’s Dinner in Minutes.

To buy: 1 lime, 1 medium zucchini, 1 medium yellow squash, 6 ounces large shrimp 6 ounces large sea scallops and 1 jar dried dill.

Staples: Olive oil, garlic quick-cooking brown rice, salt and black peppercorns.

(From “Mix’n'Match Meals in Minutes for People with Diabetes” by Linda Gassenheimer, published by the American Diabetes Association. Reprinted with permission from The American Diabetes Association. To order this book call 1-800-232-6733 or order online at http://store.diabetes.org)

Fish & Seafood with Bill & Sheila


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Gulf fishermen reel from seafood troubles

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seafood

Gulf fishermen reel from seafood troubles

In Bon Secour, Ala., Mike Skinner, a third-generation shrimper whose entire family works in the business, said last fall was the worst season he had ever seen.

“Hopefully it was a fluke thing. We’ll find out this year,” he said as he piloted his trawler across Mobile Bay.

In Alabama, seafood sales are down about 10 percent to $146 million in the two years since the BP gusher, according to an Auburn University study obtained by the AP. The downturn represented nearly $16 million in lost sales and has left few fishing boats in industry hubs like the Bon Secour River.

To ease the hardships, BP has given $48.5 million to Gulf states so they can market their seafood industries on websites, TV commercials, billboards and print ads that say the catch is healthy.

BP spokesman Craig Savage said the Gulf seafood industry was strong. “The fact is, the data show that seafood from the Gulf of Mexico is safe and abundant, according to numerous government reports,” he said.

Truly identifying any effect of the spill — if any — on marine stocks won’t be possible from landings data for several years, said Chuck Wilson, executive director of the Louisiana Sea Grant College Program, a university-based group of agents and researchers.

Still, there’s reason to be wary, said Olivia Watkins, a spokeswoman for the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

“We are seeing a number of anomalies in the Gulf of Mexico,” Watkins said. “We should not attempt to draw premature conclusions.”

The long-term prognosis for the Gulf’s health remains uncertain.

Recent studies have found higher numbers of sick fish close to where BP’s well blew out and genome studies of bait fish in Barataria have identified abnormalities. Meanwhile, vast areas of the cold and dark Gulf seafloor are oiled, scientists say.

And many fishermen are convinced something’s amiss.

“I think the oil can kill the shrimp eggs. That’s why there was no shrimp to catch last year,” said Tuna Pham, a 40 -year-old Vietnamese-American shrimper docked in Lafitte. He said the catch this year was bad again.

“We was there to work, but couldn’t,” said Lawrence Salvato, 49, as he stopped for lunch on a dock where he moors a shrimp skiff he runs his wife, Lisa. “Usually people are excited and they can’t wait to get out there. This year, there’s no real incentive.”

He said he made about $10,000 in seafood sales last year compared to $75,000 in 2009. He said his family made do with a $40,000 interim payment they got from BP. Fishermen who haven’t settled legally yet with BP over damages continue to survive on periodic payments from a $20 billion trust fund set up by BP.

“We’re afraid,” Salvato said. “A lot of people are getting out of fishing. They’re afraid.”

———

Associated Press writer Jay Reeves reported from Bon Secour, Ala.


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Did slaves catch your seafood?

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Did slaves catch your seafood?

PREY VENG, Cambodia, and SAMUT SAKHON, Thailand — In the sun-baked flatlands of Cambodia, where dust stings the eyes and chokes the pores, there is a tiny clapboard house on cement stilts. It is home to three generations of runaway slaves.

The man of the house, Sokha, recently returned after nearly two years in captivity. His home is just as he left it: barren with a few dirty pillows passing for furniture. Slivers of daylight glow through cracks in the walls. The family’s most valuable possession, a sow, waddles and snorts beneath the elevated floorboards.

Before his December escape, Sokha (a pseudonym) was the property of a deep-sea trawler captain. The 39-year-old Cambodian, his teenage son and two young nephews were purchased for roughly $650, he said, each through brokers promising under-the-table jobs in a fish cannery.

There was no cannery. They were instead smuggled to a pier in neighboring Thailand, where they were shoved aboard a wooden vessel that motored into a lawless sea. His uncle had fallen for the same scam five years prior and escaped to warn the others. But Sokha told his son, then just 16, that this venture would turn out differently. He was wrong.

“We worked constantly, for no pay, through seasickness and vomiting, sometimes for two or three days straight,” he said. “We obeyed the captain’s every word.”

Near-daily death threats reinforced the captain’s supremacy. So did his Vietnam War-era K-54 pistol, and the night he carved up another slave’s face in view of the crew. “For 20 hours a day, we were forced to catch and sort sea creatures: mackerel, crabs, squid.” It’s back-breaking work, under the searing tropical sun. “But the fish wasn’t for us,” he added.

So who was it all for?

The answer should unsettle anyone who closely examines Thailand’s multi-billion dollar wild-caught seafood industry and the darkest links in its supply chain.

“It’s an export-oriented market. And we know the countries where these products are exported to,” said Lisa Rende Taylor, chief technical specialist with the United Nations Inter-Agency Project on Human Trafficking or UNIAP. “Do the math.”

For Americans, the calculation is worrisome. Thailand is the United States’ second-largest supplier of foreign seafood. Of America’s total seafood imports, one out of every six pounds comes from the Southeast Asian nation.

In 2011 alone, Thailand exported 827 million pounds of seafood worth more than $2.5 billion to the US, according to National Marine Fisheries Service figures. The only nation that consumes more Thai seafood exports is Japan.

Murder is an occupational hazard. But a monotonous job assembling iPads is heaven compared to slavery on a Thai trawler, where conditions are as grueling and violent as any 19th-century American plantation. The lucky escape within a year or so. Less fortunate are those traded several times over for years on end.

Denying that the fruits of forced labor reach the biggest importers of Thai seafood — Japan, America, China and the European Union — has become increasingly implausible.

The accounts of ex-slaves, Thai fishing syndicates, officials, exporters and anti-trafficking case workers, gathered by GlobalPost in a three-month investigation, illuminate an opaque offshore supply chain enmeshed in slavery.

A long trail of offshore operators — slave boats, motherships and independent fishmongers — can obfuscate the origins of slave-caught seafood before it ever reaches the shore. While the industry’s biggest earners rely on clannish and violence-prone fishing crews for raw material, they’re distanced from the worst abuses by hundreds of nautical miles and several degrees of middlemen.

The result is that many Thai factory bosses have no idea who caught the seafood they process for foreign consumers.

There are caveats. The majority of Thailand’s two largest seafood exports to the US — tuna and shrimp — are sourced differently. Most “Thai” tuna is actually imported from overseas and processed for re-export. The shrimp industry, though routinely accused of abusing poor migrants, is at least vulnerable to spot checks on seaside farms.

The same cannot be said for deep-sea trawlers, the favored vessel of slave-driving captains.

The species caught by Thai trawlers legal and illicit alike include sardines, mackerel, cuttlefish, squid, anchovies and “trash fish,” tiny or foul-tasting catch ground into animal food or preserved to create fish sauce. Americans consume these breeds en masse. One in five pounds of America’s imported mackerel or sardines comes from Thailand, according to US government records. For processed fish balls, puddings or cakes — made from trawlers’ trash fish — the figure is one in three pounds. Thai fish sauce supplies nearly 80 percent of the American market.

All that trawler catch ends up in familiar American fare: anchovy pizzas, squid linguine, smoked mackerel salads and fish fillets on ice. Even pets are entangled: trash fish is a common dog- and cat-food ingredient. But industry representatives in Thailand admit there’s often no way to tell whether a particular package of deep-sea fish was caught using forced labor.

Using bar codes, American shoppers can track packaged Thai-exported seafood to its onshore processing facility, said Arthon Piboonthanapatana, secretary general of the Thai Frozen Foods Association. “You can trace it back to the factories.”

But exporters, he said, are not in the business of policing the fishing syndicates that supply their factories. “We only have the power to enforce our members,” Arthon said. “We have no power to enforce other stakeholders such as boats or fishermen.”

American seafood importers consider themselves similarly powerless in overseeing far-flung Thai boats. “Western regulatory agencies have little or no reach, or authority, over various parts of the value chain,” said Gavin Gibbons, spokesman for the National Fisheries Institute, America’s chief seafood trade organization and lobbying group based outside Washington, DC. The institute will promptly respond to allegations against specific factories, he said. But so far, it has not found an effective way to monitor conditions on deep-sea boats catching US-bound fish.

“We have started discussions with our members about just how far an audit could realistically go and whether, perhaps, there are dockside audits that could be developed,” Gibbons said.

The “nature of boats being at sea,” he said, presents a major challenge to industry’s self-policing efforts.

International pressure to rid Thailand’s seafood trade of slavery is mounting. Thailand teeters just above the US State Department’s worst human-trafficking ranking and could be downgraded this summer. Last year, during a visit that vexed Bangkok officials, a UN rapporteur declared that forced labor is “notoriously common” in Thailand’s fishing sector and even alleged police complicity.

“It’s not like monitoring brothels, plantations or factories … all this labor is at sea,” Rende Taylor said. “So it’s essentially a universe where captains are king. Some are out to make as much money as possible by working these guys around the clock and being as cruel as they want to be.”

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Packing tips and seafood recipes for cooking at the beach

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Packing tips and seafood recipes for cooking at the beach

My husband and I are heading to the Florida panhandle for a week of rest and relaxation. The Jeep is packed with beach umbrellas and chairs, bathing suits and flip-flops, a bag filled with books and magazines, and what I call “the seafood kitchen basket.”

The basket contains what I deem essential for cooking away from home. In our many years of vacationing at the beach, we’ve never stayed in a place whose kitchen was equipped with good knives, more than two towels, festive napkins or spices of any kind, so I bring all of that. I’m equipped to prepare leisurely breakfasts, sandwich lunches and seafood suppers.

I’ve already scoped out (via the Internet) nearby supermarkets and seafood purveyors. From earlier trips there, I already know about Sweet Home Farm Cheese in Alabama, where we load up with chunks of our favorites — Bama Jack, Perdido, Baldwin Swiss and Elberta — to enjoy during the cocktail hour. Usually the ice chest is packed with a couple of casseroles ready for the oven plus a couple of quarts of crawfish etouffee, but alas, I’ve not had time to prepare ready-to-eat food.

My husband, Rock, always rolls his eyes when I pack the car with enough food, liquor and clothes for a month’s stay. His philosophy on traveling is that “we are not going to a foreign country, the money is the same and there is always a Walmart nearby.”

I also am armed with a small file containing recipes I’ve snipped from Coastal Living magazine and a few seafood recipes from my files.

Barbecued Shrimp

Makes 4 to 6 servings
6 pounds large shrimp, heads on (don’t peel them)
2 sticks butter
3/4 cups olive oil
1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce
6 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 teaspoon garlic powder
2 teaspoons paprika
2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1-1/2 teaspoons salt (or to taste)
1/2 teaspoon hot sauce (or more, according to taste)
1 tablespoon rosemary leaves
1 teaspoon oregano leaves
Rinse the shrimp in cool water and drain. Spread the shrimp in a large shallow baking pan. In a saucepan, melt butter, then add the rest of the ingredients. Mix well. Pour the sauce over the shrimp and marinate for 1 hour. Bake at 325 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes. Stir a couple of times with a spatula. Do not overcook. Serve in a soup bowl with lots of hot French bread to sop up the sauce. Bring on the cold beer!
••••••••

Although I’m sure we’ll have to pay top dollar for crabmeat, my mouth is watering just thinking of crab cakes. Here are two recipes.

Crab Chops
Makes 6 servings

3 tablespoons butter
3 green onions, chopped (green and white parts)
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 cup milk
1 pound lump crabmeat, picked over for shells and cartilage
20 saltine crackers, finely crumbled
1 egg, lightly beaten
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
1/8 teaspoon Tabasco hot sauce
Cracker meal or bread crumbs for dredging
Butter and vegetable oil for frying

Heat the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the onions and cook, stirring, for about 1 minute. Alternate adding the flour and milk, stirring constantly to make a smooth, thick bechamel sauce. Remove from heat. Add crabmeat, saltine cracker crumbs, egg, salt, cayenne and Tabasco. Gently mix together and chill mixture in refrigerator for about 1 hour.
Gently shape the mixture into 6 patties. Dredge them in the cracker meal or bread crumbs, coating completely and evenly.
Put about 1/2 inch of equal parts butter and vegetable oil in a nonstick skillet over medium heat. Fry the patties 2 or 3 minutes on each side until golden brown. Drain on paper towels and serve with tartar sauce.
••••••••

These crab cakes are bound with mayonnaise and buttery-style crackers. My husband likes these for brunch, topped with fried or poached eggs drizzled with hollandaise sauce.

Maryland-style Crab Cakes
Makes 6 to 8 servings

4 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup finely chopped onions
1/2 cup finely chopped green bell peppers
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1-1/2 teaspoons yellow mustard
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
2 tablespoons finely chopped parsley
1 tablespoon Old Bay Seasoning
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 egg, beaten
1 cup buttery cracker crumbs (such as Ritz, Captain’s Wafers or Escort), plus more
for dredging
1 pound lump crabmeat, picked over for shells and cartilage
Vegetable oil

Heat the butter in a medium-size skillet over medium heat. Add the onions and bell peppers and cook, stirring, until soft and golden, 6 to 8 minutes. Remove from the heat and cool.
Combine mayonnaise, Worcestershire, mustard, parsley, Old Bay, baking powder, salt, egg, 1 cup of the cracker crumbs and the crabmeat in a large mixing bowl. Add the onions and bell peppers and gently mix to blend well.
Form the mixture into 6 or 8 plump patties and dredge in more of the cracker crumbs. Cover and refrigerate at least 2 hours.
Heat about 1 inch of vegetable oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Fry, turning once, until evenly browned, about 3 minutes on each side. Drain on paper towels and serve warm. (You can also bake them in a preheated 450-degree oven for about 10 minutes.)
••••••••

Before we unpack the car, Rock is usually off and running to the nearest seafood market to find trout, redfish or grouper to make these roulades.

Fish Roulades
Makes 6 servings

6 fillets of firm white fish such as trout, redfish or grouper, 6 to 8 ounces each
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
4 tablespoons butter
4 green onions, finely chopped
1 garlic clove, minced
1/2 pound fresh mushrooms, wiped clean, stemmed and chopped
1 pound shrimp (peeled and deveined) or 1 pound lump crabmeat (picked over for shells and cartilage)
1 teaspoon dried basil leaves
Salt, freshly ground black pepper, and cayenne pepper
1 cup chicken broth
1 cup fine dried bread crumbs (more or less as needed)
1 cup half-and-half

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Gently pound the fillets a bit to make them lie flat. Sprinkle with lemon juice.
Heat 2 tablespoons of the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the onions, garlic, and mushrooms and cook, stirring, for 2 minutes. Add the shrimp or crabmeat and basil, and season with salt, black pepper and cayenne. Add 3/4 cup of the chicken broth and simmer for 5 minutes.
Add bread crumbs and stir so that the mixture binds together. Remove from heat and cool.
Place a tablespoon or so of the mixture on top of the fish fillet and roll up like a jelly roll. (You may have to use a toothpick to hold the roll together.)
Place the roulades in a baking pan with the remaining 1/4 cup chicken broth and the half-and half.
Dot with the remaining butter. Bake until the fish flakes easily with a fork, 20 to 25 minutes. Serve with tartar sauce or citrus butter sauce.

Citrus Butter
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
3 tablespoons fresh orange juice
2 tablespoons white wine
1 tablespoon chopped shallots
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
1/2 teaspoon peppercorns
3 tablespoons heavy cream
1 stick (1/2 cup) unsalted butter, cut into chips
Salt and cayenne to taste

Combine citrus juices, white wine, shallots, thyme and peppercorns in a non-reactive saucepan over medium heat and reduce by half. Add the cream and reduce again by half. Whisk in the cold butter, a little at a time, allowing the butter to melt before adding more. Strain through a fine sieve. Season to taste with salt and cayenne.

Source: nola.com

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Spotlight on (Sea)Food Safety and Transparency | seafood

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Spotlight on Seafood Safety and Transparency

As a company that promotes the consumption of clean, safe seafood as part of a healthy diet, it’s our belief that consumers have the right to know what’s in the food they’re eating — this belief represents one of the core values of Safe Harbor and one of the overarching principles that drives our business. Recently food safety and transparency in the food supply chain have been topics of much discussion, and for good reason. As it becomes more and more apparent that the FDA seems ill-equipped to assume a leadership role in ensuring food safety, are food manufacturers missing an opportunity? Might it be that embracing, implementing and advertising increased food safety measures and transparency can be a powerful marketing tool, one that provides differentiation in a packed and overcrowded marketplace?

While the federal government may be reluctant to embrace increased oversight over the food supply chain, the opinion of the American public on the subject is as unanimous and straightforward as ever. Take for example the federal issue of mandatory food labeling for genetically engineered foods — a partisan-busting 91 percent of voters favor an FDA requirement that “foods which have been genetically engineered or containing genetically engineered ingredients be labeled to indicate that.” A mere 5 percent oppose labeling, while another 5 percent have no opinion. As the strategic polling, survey and opinion research firm The Mellman Group so eloquently opines:

Underlying support for labeling is a clear vision of consumer rights, as well as a deep-seated concern. Voters believe they have a right to know what they are putting in their mouths and into the bodies of their children. If you don’t believe Americans see that as a fundamental right, try convincing someone they don’t have that right to know. Moreover, voters believe they have a related right to decide for themselves what they ingest and recognize that, absent labeling, the right to decide is rendered hollow.

This value of the right to know is catching fire as evidenced by the California Right to Know 2012 Ballot Initiative. California has officially become the first state to gather enough signatures (971,126) to put the labeling of genetically engineered foods on its statewide ballot this fall. While the Right to Know initiative is a major step in the right direction, unfortunately it is a California-only proposal and only covers GMO foods. Food labeling and transparency should be a fundamental, mandated practice employed across every food category, even those with the most complex supply chains.

Like seafood, for example.

Unbeknownst to many, seafood is the most traded food commodity in the world (UN FAO State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture, 2010) and the seafood supply and distribution chain might be the most complex of any food commodity internationally traded today. Approximately 85% of the seafood Americans eat is now imported, with less than 2% being inspected by the FDA, the federal agency charged with oversight of seafood. Unfortunately for American consumers, offshore seafood producers simply do not face the same oversight and regulation as domestic producers, which leaves the door wide open for corner-cutting, the use of potentially hazardous additives and chemicals and other abuses. David Love, the lead author of a recent Johns Hopkins study, (linked above and again here) sums up the situation quite succinctly stating, “Imported seafood may carry risks in terms of food safety because the FDA does not have the resources to proactively and regularly inspect foreign facilities, and it relies on product testing as a last resort.”

Especially as it applies to seafood (and according to Gary Hirshberg, Chairman of Stonyfield Farm, and a Partner in the Just Label It Campaign) it would seem that our food system has been adept at “keeping the lights out or at least dimmed.” However, viral media, the Internet and the instantaneous, abundant free flow of information is changing this … quickly. Information is now available at one’s fingertips, accessed quickly with a simple key stroke. Having the information we need to make an informed choice is no longer simply expected. It’s required. In the words of Mr. Hirshberg:

As the chairman of a $370 million national yogurt company, I’ve watched the consumer demand for more information about our food explode over the past decade. Whether it’s the source of the ingredients, increases in agri-chemicals, hormones, antibiotics, plastics additives or potential allergens, the public is clearly far more engaged in making informed choices than ever before.

So where should the onus of food safety and transparency lie? Unfortunately our federal government is under-manned and under-funded and simply can’t be relied upon to be the protectors of public health. Many forward-thinking food manufacturers (seafood and otherwise) feel that it is up to the industry (NOT the government) to increase the transparency of the supply chain and safeguard the very consumers eating their products; subsequently, as consumers become more educated (as can be seen domestically with the rapid rise of the organic and local food movements) and continue to demand labeling, transparency and increased food safeguards, advertising and strategically utilizing these “characteristics” of one’s business will become major marketing “weapons,” differentiators that will prove that implementing and accepting these consumer-backed “trends” are actually good for business. As Mr. Hirshberg above so deftly put it, “Instead of fighting transparency, it’s time to embrace it.” We couldn’t have said it any better ourselves.

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