Seafood
Salmon Hash with Horseradish-Dill Cream
This brunch dish makes delicious use of leftover cooked salmon or potatoes.
Mussels in Pasilla Broth with Corn, Jícama, and Cilantro
Serve this terrific dish with crusty bread and soup spoons so that your guests can enjoy every last drop.
By Dan Krinsky and Ticha Krinsky
Herbed Clam Hash
Satisfying accompaniments for this clever hash would be steamed broccoli and a salad of crisp romaine lettuce with red wine vinaigrette and some shaved Parmesan cheese. We recommend serving slices of Boston cream pie afterward.
Smoked Salmon Salad
If you can't find yellow pear or yellow cherry tomatoes, use all red cherry tomatoes to make this colorful and refreshing salad.
Mussel and Carrot Soup
Gah Yan Tsui writes, via gourmet.com: "I recently enjoyed a delicious lunch at Aquavit in New York City. Marcus Samuelsson makes an incredible mussel and carrot soup. Would it be possible to acquire the recipe?"
This soup tastes much better when made with fresh carrot juice. If you don't have a juicer, you can get some at your nearest natural foods store.
Active time: 30 min Start to finish: 45 min
Cauliflower and Shrimp Caldin
A caldin is a coconut curry, typical of Goa. Though caldins are made with fresh coconut milk in India, chef Cardoz uses Chaokoh brand canned unsweetened coconut milk. It's thicker and richer than other brands, and imparts a great deal of flavor. It's important not to let the caldin boil during cooking, or the coconut sauce will break.
By Floyd Cardoz
Spaghetti con Cozze Delle Marche
By Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers
Salmon with Parsley Cream Sauce
A sophisticated main course that's quick and easy to make. Accompany the fish with wild rice pilaf and steamed asparagus.
John Dory Fillets Seared in Indian Pastry with Tomato Cardamom Sauce
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from chef Neil Perry's book Rockpool. Neil also shared some helpful cooking tips exclusively with Epicurious, which we've added at the bottom of the page. For your convenience, we've converted the measures — with as much accuracy as possible — from Australian to American. For those who have metric equipment and wish to follow Neil's recipe to the milliliter, we've included the original measures too.
To read more about Neil and Australian cuisine, click here.
In this dish, the combination of pastry, fish, sauce, yoghurt and spinach makes a complete dish. The cardamom and tomato are a perfect match, and the fish steams gently inside as the outside of the pastry crisps up. This dish also works beautifully with the flat fish of Europe and America. It is important that the vegetables are well-seasoned and cooked until they caramelise to impart their flavour to the sauce. The depth of flavour of aromatics is so often lost when they are not allowed to do their job properly.
The Tomato and Cardamom Sauce goes nicely with all seafood; its deep, rich flavour enlivens the taste buds. The tomatoes are cut up, skin, seeds and all. Slice into thin rounds, then into julienne and chop the julienne to give a uniform dice. Don't chop them as if cutting for concassé, they lose too much juice that way.
By Neil Perry
Scallops and Haricots Verts with Creamy Bacon Vinaigrette
Serve with: Unoaked California Chardonnay • wild rice with spring herbs • watercress with orange juice vinaigrette • lemon curd tart with strawberry sauce