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scream-of-consciousness; "If you're trying to change minds and influence people it's probably not a good idea to say that virtually all elected Democrats are liars, but what the hell."
Monday, November 02, 2015
Salmon
"If the number of Islamic terror attacks continues at the current rate, candlelight vigils will soon be the number-one cause of global warming. " |
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6 comments:
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I have never cared for shellfish or the rich gamy fish species. My favorite
fish are the mild varieties of whitefish like Cod and Halibut.
When I was younger, I spent some time at the bottom of the U at the horseshoe
pier in Redondo Beach. There was this seafood restaurant with hundreds of
seats located outside. The sounds were what you would expect from hundreds of
Asians chattering away like chickens on cocaine and the constant hammering of
wooden mallets cracking crabs. Finally, there was the odor. Imagine something
so foul it would drive the maggots off a Civil War gut wagon.
Someone once told me "If it smells bad, don't eat it." But I think that was in
an entirely unrelated context!
- 11/2/15, 9:07 AM
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The best Salmon is no doubt the Sockeye Salmon from the Copper River in Alaska. Much milder flavor than the typical Salmon from the Atlantic. Generally only available in late May through June. $18.00 per pound but worth it. I usually buy the whole fish and have the butcher save the trimmings and bones to make fish stock for Lobster Bisque.
- 11/2/15, 9:31 AM
- Pawpaw said...
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I'd have offered my luncheon guest a peanut butter sammich, and said the hell with it. Which is why I have few luncheon guests
- 11/2/15, 12:59 PM
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"We had a luncheon guest Friday who doesn't..."
Can they take a hint? How about a beating? - 11/2/15, 3:11 PM
- Unknown said...
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DonM, de gustibus non est disputandum, but I don't know where you get that sockeye is milder than Atlantic salmon. Atlantic salmon (all of which available commercially is farm-raised) is by far the mildest and tenderest. People don't usually buy wild-caught salmon for its "mildness". They buy it for its stronger, "wild" flavor (and often because they're elitists about farmed salmon).
Why would you bother paying for Copper River salmon and then slather it with all kinds of crap that corrupts its natural flavor?
I soak my salmon filets or portions (whatever variety) in lime juice and sautee 'em in olive or canola oil, and season 'em in the pan with a sprinkle of the late Chef Paul's Salmon Magic (it's not really magic -- the first ingredient is sugar! -- but it does a great job. The only "exotic" ingredient is the mustard seed).
I start 'em skin side up (even when skinned) so that after I turn 'em they're skin side down/presentation side up. I give 'em just a couple of minutes per side on a medium flame, seasoning both sides, and I serve 'em as soon as they yield to the spatula, rare like a prime rib or chateaubriand; they melt in your mouth. - 11/3/15, 11:46 AM
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Hint: Artic Char puts any available salmon in the cat-food category. Especially when the Char is fresh-caught and then smoked in a smoker made out of a shipping crate, an element from a stove, refrigerator racks, and using the oak skids from other crate for the smoke...heh, heh, heh.
- 11/5/15, 11:03 PM