What's for dinner? Just Wing it! (Skate Wing, that is)

Friday, April 29th, 2011 | posted by Monahan's

Monahan's Seafood | Skate WingHere’s another underutilized treasure for ya—Skate! When we first started selling Skate back in the ’80s, most Skate was used for Lobster bait, exported or just thrown overboard. That’s hard to believe since they’re  loved all over the world.

In France, Raie is often poached or sauteed with a lemon caper brown butter sauce. Koreans marinate their Hong O in lemon hot pepper sauce and serve them uncooked on the crunchy cartilage. The Greek Selahi, Italian Razza or Spanish Raya have always been popular. It’s no wonder that this fish is so loved—its delicate sweet meat is delicious and its beautiful fan-shaped wings (actually pectoral fins) make a stunning presentation on the plate.

These ancient creatures are very close relatives of the sharks. There are 500 species and they’ve been around for 400 million years. Of the seven species off of our north Atlantic coast, we sell mainly the Winter Skate, also known as Spotted Skate. The sharp spines on these fish make them a bit tricky to fillet—get poked and you bleed like crazy and it hurts like heck! Once you taste them you’ll know know why we go to the trouble. Try the French classic Raie au beurre noir or a recipe for baked skate with cucumber, capers and tomato from our own Wendy Williams that she picked up in cooking school in France.

Bon appetit!

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The Rodney Dangerfield of the Cod family: Pollack

Friday, April 22nd, 2011 | posted by mike

Last week we reported on the plentiful, delicious and under appreciated hake. There is another fish in the cod family that really deserves more credit then it gets and that fish is pollack.

Pollack has a little darker flesh then cod or haddock and a bit more fat and flavor, but it’s a fine fish that can be used in any cod recipe and it doesn’t deserve to be the Rodney Dangerfield of the cod family—it just gets no respect.

At our market we should sell a lot more pollack then we do! Is it in it’s name? Are people afraid to ask for something that they think sounds like a derogatory name for a Polish person? Is it the darker color? I don’t think so ’cause we sell tons of blue fish and mackerel. Maybe people are confused with the Alaskan pollack that show up in many forms including most frozen fish fillets used in fast food restaurants, frozen fish sticks, surimi products that include artificial crab meat.

Alaskan pollack is the largest fishery in the world, but its light bland meat doesn’t compare with north Atlantic pollack  (which is what we sell at the market). Maybe people associate the widely distributed and lightly processed Alaskan pollack with our beautiful fresh filleted Atlantic pollack. This is a fish that has been marketed in the U.S. As Boston bluefish and is now commonly called Boston blue cod. We could probably sell more fish if we simply gave it a sexier moniker but we’ve always been very strict with our labeling.

There are thousands of fish in the world all with their own interesting or unusual names.A pollack is a pollack just as a croaker is a croaker or a grunt is a grunt. Call ‘em what they are and enjoy them. You may have already tried pollack if you’ve sampled our fish ‘n chips, fish sandwiches or our fish tacos. The lowly pollack is ready for its due! The time is right! The stocks are plentiful, the price is right (in a time of rising wild fish prices). So give it a go. You’ll be pleasantly surprised.

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Hake: Unsung Hero

Friday, April 15th, 2011 | posted by mike

A great fish that most people outside of New England have never heard of is Hake. It’s not that there aren’t enough of them—the North Atlantic stocks are plentiful and sustainable. They fit the profile of a white, delicate, sweet fish that Americans traditionally love. They are also usually sold at a great price compared to it’s more famous cousins like cod, haddock and even pollack.

There are many different species of hake. The one we sell is called white hake, which is similar in texture and flavor to the European hake. Now here is another of the many examples of  “one mans trash is another mans treasure.” Although hake is familiar to folks in New England, I’ve never seen it on a menu (outside of our own) in the midwest, except for a few big city spanish restaurants. Spain’s national fish is Hake (Merluza). One third of the total of fish consumed in Spain is Hake, and there’s a lot of diffrerent fish in Spain. It’s incredible that something that is such a huge part of entire cultures is little known and underutilized in most of the U.S.

Out of all the fish in the cod family, Americans have always preferred cod and haddock over hake and pollock. Part of it is because of texture. Cod for example has large, firm flakes. Hake is tighter textured, fairly soft and delicate. It’s flavor is mild and subtly sweet, but if you were to simply bake it, some might find it to be soft and bland. However, if you were to visit San Sebastian, Spain and experience Basque style ‘Merluza a la Koxkera’ (hake with clams), the sweet flavor of the hake with a rich clammy green sauce might be the best thing you’ve ever eaten. It’s all in the right preparation for the right fish.

Hake is always good cooked with a little texture to it. Hot-pan searing and serving over a pepper tomato sauce; or coating it with seasoned breadcrumbs, such as panko parmesan herb crust and baking it at high heat, the results will be a super light, delicate and sweet fish with a bit of a crust instead of a soft boring texture.

Another problem with Hake in America is that it doesn’t travel well. Since it’s softer and more delicate than other fish, it’s more perishable which means that the chances of buying less than fresh fish outside of the east coast is greatly increased. We bring in whole hake and fillet them fresh so that’s not a problem at Monahan’s.

Here’s our version of hake with clams, in Spain this dish would be cooked in a clay cazuela and be spun over a stove for 20 minutes til the sauce gels and thickens. Our version of this recipe is a lot easier and pretty darn good.

We’re also including an old new England style slack-salted Corned Hake recipe that Bill Gerencer shared with us. Bill is the buyer for our oldest (30 years) supplier, M. F. Foley, in Boston and New Bedford. He was a commercial fisherman in his younger days and this is a dish he used to cook onboard his vessel (notice the canned cream corn from the galley’s pantry). Thanks Bill!

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Springtime in Michigan = SMELT!

Friday, April 8th, 2011 | posted by mike

Yes! Spring really is coming ! It’s supposed to be 75 degrees by Sunday, the buds are pushing up through the soil, robins are singing and Great Lakes smelt are showing up. Heading up the streams in the dark of night on their annual spawning run, these sweet little relatives of the salmon are one of Michigan’s spring treats.

Great Lakes SmeltLike many fish that we consider to be our own, smelt, all the Michigan salmons, rainbow trout, and carp, to name a few, aren’t really natives. Our smelt originally came from hatcheries in Maine. They were first introduced into the St. Marys River back in 1909 to hopefully become feed for Lake Michigan salmon, but after repeated failures the stocks never survived. Smelt was stocked in Crystal Lake in 1912 as feed for land locked salmon and they not only survived but flourished. They made their way into Lake Michigan and by the spring of 1920 so many fish were running into Cold Creek, flowing through the town of Beulah at the head of Crystal Lake, that they were overflowing the banks! Fisherman flooded into Beulah in such numbers that the state police had to be called in to control the crowds. The tradition of ” smelt dipping” had begun.

There were so many fish, they were caught simply by dipping a net for them. The Michigan spring ritual of making a bonfire stream side and filling buckets, garbage cans and even pick up trucks full of smelt, then staying up all night cleaning them with a pair of scissors and frying ‘em up continued on for years. By 1936 these little fish were in all of the Great Lakes and there was a huge sport and commercial fishery for them with fresh and frozen smelt being shipped all over the country and as far away as Japan.

Anthony Bourdain at Monahan's Seafood Market in Ann Arbor, MI

Here's Tony in our courtyard about to enjoy a plate of Michigan smelt on a gorgeous Spring day.

If you’ve ever experienced the sweet crunch of a fried smelt, salted and eaten whole you’d know what all the fuss is about.When Anthony Bourdain was at the store last May to film a promo for his latest book Medium Raw, we asked him what he’d like us to cook up for him. He eyed the pile of fresh smelt and asked “Are those the little guys you eat whole? I’m all over that.”

The days of truck loads of smelt are, at least for now, over. Populations have gone down over the years, partially the work of invasive species like zebra mussels competing with them for food, and there is even a 2 gallon limit for sports fishermen now. Fortunately, there is still a pretty fair commercial catch.

As far as cooking methods, in my opinion, there’s only one way to properly cook smelt and that’s to fry them. Lightly dusted and hot pan or deep fried. Here’s our recipe for Fried Smelt at the Market.

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SHOCKING New Species Discovery at Monahan's: Seeing-Eye Oyster from Wellfleet!

Friday, April 1st, 2011 | posted by mike

Seeing-Eye Oyster Discovered at Monahan's SeafoodShucking oysters on this early April Friday morning I popped the top shell off a nice plump Wellfleet and I experienced a sight so frightening that my knees buckled!

Looking down on one of thousands of oysters I’ve shucked in my life, NEVER has one looked back up at me!

The first thing I did was to show this freak of nature to the staff. Some laughed thinking it was a joke, some were puzzled or even scared, but all agreed that it was one of the plumpest, most succulent and beautiful oysters we’d ever seen.

Do I call the news media?…a U of M marine biologist? or do I just squeeze a little lemon on it and experience something that no one has ever experienced before? I decided on the latter, so I dressed it up on a plate of ice, called my wife, a photographer and told her to get down to the market —FAST! She arrived, captured the image, and as I picked the oyster up to savor it’s essence I took one last look at this amazing creature.

We looked eye to eye—and in a slow and almost sensuous way—the oyster winked at me!

On the verge of passing out, I just couldn’t do it. She remains, at least for the rest of this April Fool’s Day, on display at Monahan’s Seafood.

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