Dinner at McCormick & Schmick, the seafood chain, to kick off eight-month halibut season. Exec chef in Seattle, Eric Naruszewicz, a Boston transplant who was quick to get the hang of local seafood, crusts a halibut filet with curried cashews, serves atop field greens with honey-mustard vinaigrette, Asian pears and red grapes.
There's lots of halibut out there, a whopper of a fish (up to 8 feet long, 4 feet wide, 600 pounds) that lives in deep, cold Alaskan waters. Lives forever, almost. Ugly as sin (flat, eyes on one side) but often considered sacred (the "hali" part derives from "holy," historically eaten on feast days).
Steaks and filets, to be sure, but the best part is the cheeks. Low in calories, high in protein and omega-3 acids. Healthy. tasty critter, flakier than tuna or swordfish. Takes well to grilling, poaching, baking. Holy flatfish!
Off to France this afternoon. Look for posts from the Basque Country, then from Lyon.
Posted by Ronald Holden at March 26, 2008 9:57 AM | TrackBack
The International Kitchen
Cooking school vacations in Italy, France & Spain.
Hey, Ron, have a great trip. When will we see you again? Enjoy France for me!
Bon Voyage,
Betty
Posted by: Betty Frost at March 26, 2008 2:37 PMMmm...halibut cheeks. Cooked en papillote with julienne of carrots, scallions, and ginger, touch of garlic, touch of soy. Or a little yuzu if you have it. Wonder how they'd cook it in Basque country.
Posted by: Shelly at March 26, 2008 11:20 AM