Say Good-Bye To Winter- Just For The Halibut

Friday, April 5th, 2013 | posted by mike

mike monahan with halibut catch

Chuck, Tom & Mike Monahan with their Alaskan halibut catch

We knew it would happen. Spring has finally arrived! Alaskan halibut season is open and right now we’re seeing some of the fattest, freshest fish of the year!

The dense, firm flesh of these big beauties is very versatile and takes to many cooking methods. Baked, pan seared, steamed, poached, fried or grilled, this fish has a delicate flavor and takes on the taste of whatever you sauce it with. The pan searing method in today’s recipe, sears in the tastiness and the moisture and is wonderful over spring asparagus with a tangy lemon caper dill butter sauce.

Click here for the recipe.

Click here to learn more about halibut and more recipes.

Click here to read what I wrote about flat fish.

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Pan Seared Halibut With Caper Dill Butter Sauce & Baby Asparagus

Friday, April 5th, 2013 | posted by mike

Serves 4

4  6-8 oz. halibut fillets

1 bunch baby asparagus

1 cup fresh dill, chopped

1 t finely chopped shallot

1 clove garlic, minced

Olive oil

3 T butter

3 T capers

1 lemon (cut out meat of the lemon and chop)

Splash of dry white wine

Drake’s batter mix or seasoned flour

Kosher Salt and pepper

 

Pre heat oven to 400º

Rinse asparagus and trim off the ends

Baste asparagus with olive oil on an oiled broiling pan, sprinkle with kosher salt and roast for 8-10 min. or until they are lightly browned

Dust top and bottom of halibut fillets with Drake’s batter mix or seasoned flour

Heat ovenproof heavy-duty pan or skillet over med-high heat

When pan is hot add olive oil (2 T or enough to coat bottom of pan)

Sear halibut, meat side down until golden brown (about 2 min.)

Flip fish, place pan in oven for another 6-10 min. or until fish is just opaque in the center (halibut thickness varies greatly, follow the 10 min. per inch total cooking time rule)

In a saucepan over med-high heat melt butter and add garlic and shallots

When garlic and shallots soften, add capers, chopped lemon, and dill, gently stir

Add a splash of white wine to thin the sauce down a bit

Arrange asparagus on plates, top asparagus with halibut and top with lemon caper dill sauce

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Bouillabaisse

Friday, December 28th, 2012 | posted by mike

Serves 8
2 quarts of Monahan’s Bouillabaisse-base (located in the freezer, made fresh every week)
2 lobster tails (cut into chunks, leaving the shell on)
1 1/2 lbs. mussels
2 lbs. manila clams (or little necks)
1 lb. monkfish or wolffish (skinned and cut up into chunks)
1 lb. pollack, cod, hake or halibut (skinned and cut into chunks)
1 lb. grouper, striped bass or Pacific rockfish fillet (skinned and cut into chunks)

optional additions: shrimp, scallops

Steam mussels and clams open in a pot and reserve.

Bring bouillabaisse base to a gentle simmer and add chunks of lobster. After 3-4 minutes, add the chunks of fish and cook for about 5 minutes. Then add the steamed shellfish, cover and cook for an additional 3 minutes. The fish is cooked once the chunks are just opaque in the center.

Ladle the soup and seafood into warm bowls and garnish with freshly chopped flat-leaf parsley—make sure to include some of each fish in each serving. Serve with toasted baguette slices and a dollop of aioli (for the garlic lovers, available at Monahan’s).

Redfish (Red Drum) Ceviche

Friday, July 13th, 2012 | posted by mike

Serves 2-4

You can substitute red snapper, or firm fleshed fish such as halibut, striped bass or fluke. Scallops also make great ceviche!

1 lb. super fresh redfish fillet—skinned and cut into 1/2 inch cubes
Juice of 10 fresh limes
Juice of 1 orange
Juice of 1 lemon
2 cloves garlic minced
1/2 a red onion, finely chopped
1 large or 2 small jalepeno peppers fine chop
2 T red pepper fine chop
2 T green pepper fine chop
2 T orange of yellow pepper fine chop
1 bunch cilantro chopped (stems removed)
2 medium tomatoes (in season) or cherry tomatoes halved
2 T olive oil
2 T pickled ginger (gari) fine chop
2 ripe avocados cut into 1/4 inch cubes (save a few pieces for garnish)
2 slices lime (for garnish)
Tortilla chips

In a glass bowl, combine citrus juices (enough to submerge fish) add fish and cover and refrigerate for about 4 hours.

Pour off most of citrus juice (leave enough for a light sauce). Gently stir in rest of ingredients. Serve in small bowls or martini glasses and garnish with extra avocado cubes and lime slices. Serve with tortilla chips

Pan-seared Pollack with Caramelized Onions

Friday, April 22nd, 2011 | posted by wendy

This recipe serves 4. You may substitute any firm-fleshed ocean fish such as cod, haddock, hake or halibut. Inspired by New Scandinavian Cooking with Andreas Viestad.

  • 4 6-8 oz. pollack fillets
  • 2 cups Caramelized Onions (see below)
  • 2 to 4 whole cloves
  • Sea salt
  • 2 to 3 T flour
  • 2 to 3 T unsalted butter or bacon fat
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • Balsamic vinegar (optional)

For the Caramelized Onions:

  • 2 pounds yellow onions
  • 1 to 2 t salt
  • 2 to 3 t sugar
  • 2 to 4 T unsalted butter or olive oil

Caramelizing the onions:

Peel, halve and thinly slice the onion. Place the onion slices in a bowl, sprinkle with salt and sugar, and toss. Set aside for at least 10 minutes.

Melt the butter over medium heat in a wide iron pot or skillet (teflon will not work for caramelizing). Add the onion (save any liquid left in the bowl). Cook over medium heat under close observation, stirring or tossing often with a spatula, until the onions begin to brown. Reduce the heat and add the liquid from the bowl. For the best results, the longer they cook, the better–reduce the heat to lowest setting, cover and cook for an hour or more, stirring every 10 minutes or so. For a shorter process, reduce the heat to medium-low and cook under close observation for about 20 minutes.

Cooking the fish:

Place the fish in ice water for 15 to 20 minutes. Place the caramelized onions in a medium saucepan and add the cloves. Reheat over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally.

Pat the fish dry and rub the fillet pieces with salt to taste and sprinkle them (on the top and bottom only) with flour or Drake’s batter mix. Heat the butter or bacon fat in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high and add the fish, skin side up. Cook for 1 minute, then turn the pieces over and cook for 5 to 7 minutes, until the fish is opaque in the center. The exact time depends on the thickness of the fish. (We like to finish by putting the whole skillet in the oven after flipping skin-side down.)

Remove the cloves from the onions and distribute among individual plates and place the fish on top. Season with pepper and a drizzle of Balsamic vinegar to taste. Serve hot.

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March 12 marked the opening of Alaskan Halibut & Black Cod Season

Friday, March 25th, 2011 | posted by mike

March 12th marked the opening of two of our favorite Alaskan fish, halibut and black cod (sablefish).

Fishing quotas for black cod this season are up, unfortunately quotas for halibut are down 19 percent from last season. Prices may be up a bit from 2010 but like last season we’ll be seeing gorgeous fish until mid November.

Alaska has done a fine job in managing and marketing their fisheries, delivering high quality, only wild-caught fish all over the world (farming fish in Alaska is illegal under the states constitution). Last March (pre-Friday Fish Report) we blogged about the mighty Alaskan halibut but we hadn’t yet started offering a recipe every week along with our article.

Here’s a recipe, a market favorite for halibut, we hope you’ll love.

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Parmesan herb crusted halibut over marinara sauce

Friday, March 25th, 2011 | posted by wendy

This recipe is great, with or without the marinara sauce. Serves 4.

For the sauce

  • 1 28 oz. can Italian plum tomatoes, San Marzano is a good brand.
  • 2 T imported Italian plum tomato paste
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 4 cloves garlic finely chopped
  • 2 T chopped fresh basil
  • 1/2 t dried oregano
  • Splash of white wine
  • salt and pepper

Heat medium sauce pan over medium high heat. Add olive oil, when oil is hot add garlic and stir ’till it just starts to brown. Add tomatoes, tomato paste, oregano, basil, salt and pepper. Stirring occasionally, bring to boil, add a splash of wine, then reduce heat and simmer for 20 to 30 minutes.

For the Fish & coating

  • 4   6-8 oz. Halibut fillets
  • 1 T light mayonnaise
  • Olive oil to drizzle

In a mixing bowl combine

  • 1 cup panko crumbs
  • 1T dried basil
  • 1 t dried oregano
  • 1 T Reggiano Parmesan
  • 1/2 -1 t red pepper flakes
  • 2 t thin sliced and chopped nori sheet  (just for looks)

Pre neat oven to 400 degrees. Lightly coat fillets with mayo, then coat all around with panko herb mixture. Place on lightly oiled baking dish or broiling pan. Drizzle (or spray) a little olive oil over fillets then season with salt and pepper. Bake for 10-14 minutes or until fish is barely opaque in the center. Serve over marinara sauce.

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Flounder, Halibut, Fluke & Sole: Flat Fish Make the World Go 'Round

Friday, January 28th, 2011 | posted by mike

Video of swimming flounder

The world of flat fish is vast, varied and confusing. There are 11 families and 500 species, 130 of them are native to America. Soles, flounders and halibut are familiar to most of us but dabs, plaice, brill,  toungefish, turbot, are all different types of flatfish. One thing that they all have in common is they all have both eyes on the same side of their head. When first born they look like normal fish swimming upright, but soon one eye will “migrate ” to the other side and the fish will flop down on it’s side.

The top side will be dark and blend in with the sea floor, some species even change colors, the bottom side is white, to blend in with the surface when swimming off the bottom. Some would wonder how such a freak could evolve into a family of 500. If you could see the way they gracefully move along, invisible to predators, agile and fast, their bodies like one big fin capable of quick bursts of speed, you would see a perfectly adapted fish.

Some flatfish are right eyed with their mouths on the left and some are left eyed, all true soles are right eyed. There are soft mouthed flatfish like Yellowtail Founder (Winter Flounder) and Grey Sole that feed on the bottom and toothy flounders like Flukes (Summer Flounder) that eat other fish.

A huge family that includes so many fine food fish is bound to have some misleading and downright erroneous labeling. For example, when you see the name “Sole” at the market, it’s probably going to really be a type of flounder. Lemon Sole (a large winter flounder fillet) from our northeast coast is delicious, but not a true sole. Pacific Dover Sole also is not a true sole and it doesn’t begin to compare in flavor or texture to the European Common or Dover Sole, which I think is one of the world’s finest fish. Pacific Rex Sole, although a sweet nutty flavored little flounder is not a true sole either. Neither is the popular Pacific Petrale Sole. Many of these fish are fine at the table, but you can see that the labeling can be hard to figure out, especially when the Dover Sole that you served at home just wasn’t quite the experience you remembered in Europe.

The bottom line for us though isn’t so much in the name but in the quality. At Monahan’s we look for flatfish that are the tastiest and that we can get to our market fast. Since freshness deteriorates quickly with these fish we have had much better luck bringing in east coast fish rather than Pacific fish. Among the regulars at our market are whole and fillets of Yellowtail Flounder, Blackback Dabs, Grey Sole, large Channel Flounders (Lemon Sole), Pacific and Atlantic Halibut and sashimi-grade Fluke. Our genuine Dover Sole we get frozen from Holland. They are flash frozen on the boat and really  good quality.

As far as flavor and preparation, most of the commercially-sold flat fish are mild and delicate, they vary in texture, sweetness and size. Since most are tender in texture, the smaller whole fish and fillets are perfect for the pan in dishes like meuniere or amandine. Larger, meatier fish like Channel Flounder, Fluke or Halibut are great to steam, bake or grill. Whole smaller flounder or fillets are also great to stuff (crab stuffing is a great flavor with sole or flounder). I love all of the flatfish that we sell but the sweetest, nuttiest, most delicious of all, for me, is Grey Sole. These fish come from the gulf of Maine and Georges Bank. Snow-white flesh and so good flash sautéed or stuffed and baked. We see lovely Grey sole this time of year, in fact there must have been a lot of fish landed this week ’cause the price will be the best we’ve seen in months! Give some a try tonight!  Here’s an easy quick one for ya. Grey Sole Amandine.

Alaskan Halibut Season has Begun!

Thursday, March 25th, 2010 | posted by mike

Halibut is a very versatile and delicious fish…sweet, delicate with a firm meaty texture. Cook it in any style—braise, bake, fry, steam and it’s even firm enough to grill the steaks or fillets. We’re getting the best halibut in our 30 year history right now!

Up until 1995, halibut season in Alaska was limited to two 24-48 hour openings of derby-style fishing where tons of fish were caught quickly and handled poorly.

We now have an individual vessel quota system, which stretches out the season over an 8-month period. The fish are handled much better than the derby days, iced properly and flown to market fast.

Come in and try our freshest, most gorgeous halibut yet…in season all through the summer for grilling.

Looking for more information about halibut? Here’s a great source from Fortune Fish.

Check our recipe archive for ways to cook halibut!

More in Saveur Magazine: Halibut with Braised Fennel and Bread Crusted Halibut with Leek Ragoût and Red Pepper Purée.

Our friend, Mary, at Everyday Wines (right around the corner here on the market floor of Kerrytown) has suggested a great pairing for halibut: Huguet de Can Feixes ($15). “Don’t be fooled by the tall, skinny bottle.  This totally dry white comes from the Cava region of Penedes and combines the typical Cava grapes of Parellada and Macabeo with a smattering of Chardonnay and Malvasia.  This unusual combination produces a stony, aromatic nose followed by flavors of pear, apple, and mineral all wrapped up in a really cool viscious texture (thank you Malvasia grape).”

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Mahi-Mahi Al Greco

Monday, March 22nd, 2010 | posted by mike

Serves 2

3/4 lbs. skinned Mahi-Mahi cut into cubes
1 T toasted pinenuts
1/3 c crumbled feta cheese
1/2 c pitted kalamata olives
1/2 c chopped artichoke hearts
5 oz (half a bag) rinsed spinach
2 large cloves of garlic (minced)
1/4 c extra virgin olive oil
1/2 medium-sized red onion, chopped
juice of one large lemon
2 t dried oregano (or 1 T fresh)
2 t dried basil (or 1 T fresh)

Combine lemon, olive oil, herbs and garlic and marinate fish cubes for 30 minutes. Remove fish from marinade and stirfry in a skillet with onion and a little more olive oil over medium-high heat for approximately 5 minutes. When fish is almost opaque in the middle, add the olives, artichoke hearts, feta and spinach to wilt. Sprinkle with toasted pinenuts.

Serve with rice or pasta.

* substitutions: any firm fleshed fish such as monkfish, swordfish, striper, or halibut.

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