A Wicked Scoff...Recipes and Food with Newfoundland and New England Influences.

This blog is dedicated to bring recipes, photographs, anecdotes, reviews and other insights on everything food related. As the name suggests, "A Wicked Scoff" will have a regional flare, a fusion if you will, of both Newfoundland and New England perspectives of the culinary world around me. Thanks for visiting and please come back often as updates will be frequent. Oh yeah, I also like tasting and cooking with regional beers. Expect a beer of the month, often paired with recipes.
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Back from hiatus.


After a lengthy hiatus, A Wicked Scoff is back. Hopefully I'll be able to maintain a healthy dose of new posts starting with today's entry. While I admit I have been it lazy these last couple of months (blogging that is, not cooking...I prioritize cooking and eating over most things in life...except for my lovely wife), this spring has not been without its share of distractions. With being on vacation in Italy for a week (more on that later), taking advantage of the extra daylight after work to do yard work, and the start of the Stanley Cup playoffs, I've been a bit preoccupied. After getting some requests and questions from friends recently however on "where's A Wicked Scoff hiding" I decided that I will be a better multi-tasker. It's really not that hard to blog about food and watch hockey at the same time you know.

With all that being said, I want to share with you a little bit about the recent vacation my wife and I went on. We traveled to Italy's Amalfi Coast and the city of Naples, truly one of the most culturally rich and significant ,not to mention beautifully scenic, destinations in the world. From the famous archaeological sites of Pompeii and Herculeneum, to Mt. Vesuvius (a volcano that could erupt at any time and wipe out more than a million people) to the jaw dropping twisty winding cliff edge road ways of the famous Amalfi Coast, to the posh Island of Capri, and finally to the rural and touristy mix of towns and fishing villages with impressive architecture and cathedrals, we saw and did a lot. What was as impressive as anything about this destination, as you may well imaging, was the food.


It's no secret that Italy is considered to be paradise for many food lovers, however the regional cuisines across Italy are quite diverse, notably between northern Italy and coastal southern Italy. The region we went to, known as Campania, is known for a few specialties, including pizza (Naples [Napoli] is the birthplace of pizza), fresh seafood, and lemons. Popular dishes from this region include Caprese salad (fresh buffalo mozzarella, sliced tomatoes and fresh basil leaves), margarita pizza (thin crust pizza cooked in an extremely hot wood burning oven topped simply with marinara, mozzarella and basil, fresh fried fish (fritto pesce ) typically cuttlefish, calamari and large shrimps, mussels or clams and fresh pasta (very lightly tossed with olive oil, cherry tomatoes and parsley), broiled fish fillet, tuna, sardines, anchovies, and the list goes on. Also traditional for this region is to take a shot of the very potent lemon liquor known as limoncello. Needless to say we ate very well, and I came home inspired to recreate some of the wonderful dishes and flavors I experienced. Maybe a few pounds heavier too with all the gelato (Italian ice cream) I ate!


So while Italian cuisine doesn't seem to have much in common with Newfoundland or New England cooking styles I think you'll be surprised on how many of the dishes I will share with you over the next few weeks will actually be familiar with your taste buds and your cooking philosophy. Simple preparation, fresh ingredients and hearty, satisfying meals.While pizza, fresh herbs, olive oil, buffalo mozzarella and pasta may not be classic Newfoundland/New England ingredients, fresh seafood certainly is. Other rustic ingredients like bread, potatoes and beans are also traditional in Italy as they are in this neck of the woods. Some of the upcoming recipes I will be sharing over the next little while will include broiled swordfish with lemon and olive oil, olive oil fried cod loins, pasta in the style of Sorrento, spaghetti and clams, tuna salad (not what you think), gnocchi (potato pasta), and much more.

Stay tuned, and stay hungry.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Fish and Chips


People are often asked what they would choose as their "last supper". For me, without a doubt it would be fish and chips. Fresh cod, lightly battered, with hand cut french fries, seasoned with sea salt, with a side of dressing and gravy, fresh lemon and good brown malt vinegar. I'd wash it all down with a cold bottle of Blue Star or India (or maybe a can of Pineapple Crush).

Living in St. John's, Newfoundland allows one to take many things for granted, and good fish-n-chips is no exception. You can get really good fresh fish and a load of fries, with all the fixins (fried onions with canned peas, dressing and gravy) all around town, even in the mall, and especially downtown on Freshwater Road.

Since I've moved away, I've yet to have great fish and chips, the way we do it back home with an "English style" wet batter that is light( not doughy) and crisp, with well cooked (twice fried is the only way to go) homemade french fries. I've had good fish, as there are "Fish Fry's" as they call them here all over the place, but they are not even close. For starters, finding homemade fries is impossible. Everyone uses frozen fries, and crinkle cut seem to be the most popular at the "Fish Fry" places I've been to (small portion too!). Then there is the fish and the batter. The fish is almost always haddock, which I like, but it isn't cod. Also is the batter. More often than not, here in upstate NY, the batter is a dry flour based batter...like a plain fried chicken crust. In New England, particularly on the coast they do a simple corn flour batter. The seafood (which I must say is often quite fresh (haddock, flounder, scallops, shrimp and clams) is simply dunked in milk and tossed in the corn flour and fried. I like this, especially on the shellfish, but again, it just isn't the same. Plus if you think you're going to find dressing and gravy served with your fish you're mistaken. Here the side is coleslaw, tarter sauce, and a malt vinegar, but the vinegar is not like we have back in Newfoundland (the stuff made from Brown Vinegar Concentrate you get at Ches' for instance).

With all that being said it is needless to say that I try and make fish and chips myself at home two or three times a month. Since I don't have a deep fat fryer, I do a pan fried cod served with oven roasted home fries, and yes I always have the dressing and gravy and a fresh tarter sauce with vinegar. Check it out!

Friday Night Fish and Chips

Cut:
4 large potatoes (whatever you like, I mix it up between Yukons, Russets and Reds) into french fries, rinse with water and dry in towels
Add:
2 Tbsp Olive Oil
Roast at 425 on baking sheet for 30-35 minutes (turn after20 minutes)

While fries are cooking, prepare:
1 1/2 pounds of cod, cut into 6 pieces

And one bowl for each of the following:
1 cup of flour
1 egg + splash of water
1 cup flour = 1 cup fine bread crumb (seasoned with kosher salt, black pepper, dried savory)

Heat 1/4 cup of vegetable oil in a large non-stick skillet over a medium high heat.
In assembly line fashion, dredge fish in flour, eggwash and seasoned flour/crumb mixture.
Add breaded fish one piece at a time to the hot oil, being careful not to splash your fingers.
Cook until golden brown and flip.

For a quick tarter sauce, combine
1 cup mayo
1 Tbsp lemon juice
4-5 capers, minced
1 tsp sweet green relish
a few shakes of malt vinegar
black pepper

Once fish and fries are done, season immediately with kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper. Squeeze the fish with lemon before serving.
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