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).

Seafood: The ULTIMATE Fancy, Luxurious Celebration Food!

Friday, December 28th, 2012 | posted by mike

cooked lobster

Dear customers,
Here’s to you!

The Mongers at Monahan’s can’t thank you enough for giving us another great year at the market.
Since 79′ folks like you have helped keep small local places like ours around and enabled us to keep doing what we love.
We truly appreciate you,

Happy New Year from all of us at Monahan’s. See you in 2013!

Another year has come and gone…What could be more special than steamed Maine lobster, caviar, or a giant king crab leg for your New Year’s feast?

Whole roasted Bronzini or Red Snapper are always an impressive crowd pleaser. One-pot dishes like Bouillabaisse, Paella, Cioppino or Oyster Stew are a celebration in themselves. A plate of steamed mussels or clams in a garlicky broth will warm your soul. Wild gulf shrimp cocktail, octopus salad, Maine lobster salad, smoked fish, pickled herring? It doesn’t get any better.

And don’t forget the oysters—the taste of the seven seas served in their own natural mother-of-pearl cup.


Valentine’s Romance with Bernie's Lobster Love Sauce

Friday, February 10th, 2012 | posted by mike

Valentine’s Day, to some, is just another Hallmark holiday. An awful lot of people though, make a really big deal of it. It’s the biggest day of the year for florists and the busiest restaurant day too. Corny or not, it is kind of nice to have any excuse to buy flowers, give a nice card or gift just to show that certain someone that you care. Taking your sweetie out for dinner is nice, but being the busiest restaurant night of the year, it can be a little hectic out there, maybe not too relaxing or romantic either.

What could be nicer than to stay home, put on some romantic music, light some candles and show some love straight from the heart- prepare a nice fish dinner! Now you don’t have to spend a lot of time and trouble to make a fantastic seafood meal. We have lots of easy recipes on this website, some of the fanciest are as easy as boiling water. Lobster, king crab legs and shrimp take minutes to prepare.

salmon en papillate with lobster sauceFor several years now we’ve been preparing a special Valentine’s oven ready salmon en papillote (wrapped in a parchment paper pouch) topped with our own Bernie Fritzsch’s creation- lobster love sauce! A decadent cream sauce with Maine lobster meat, red peppers, and shiitake mushrooms. It’s a sauce that you can make up the night before so on Valentine’s night you can have dinner on the table in less than 15 minutes (less cooking more romance)!

Here’s the recipe if you’d like to give it a go, or if you’d like to make things super simple, come down or call the market, we’ll be making papillotes to order all Valentine’s Day.

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Salmon en Papillote with Lobster Love Sauce

Friday, February 10th, 2012 | posted by mike

Serves 4

To make things really easy, let Monahan’s do all the work! We make these to order on Valentine’s Day!

4- 6 oz. center-cut salmon fillets

4 pieces of parchment paper approx. 12” x 16” (available at Monahan’s)

olive oil

For the Lobster Love Sauce

2 T butter

½ t minced garlic

1T minced shallot

½ C sliced shiitake mushrooms

1T sherry or white wine

½ C lobster stock or fish stock- available at Monahan’s

¼ C diced, roasted red pepper

½ C heavy cream

1T Reggiano Parmesan

1/3 lb. cooked lobster meat- fresh picked or thawed

salt + pepper to taste

chopped parsley- optional garnish

Melt butter in heavy saucepan, add garlic & shallots and sauté for 1 min. Add mushrooms & red pepper, sauté 5 min. then add sherry- cook for 2 min., add lobster or fish stock and cook until reduced by 1/3. Add heavy cream, cook another 5 min.- add lobster meat and parmesan, continue cooking for 2 min. Let rest for 5 minutes. Add salt & pepper to taste.

Fold parchment paper in half, then open on work surface. Lightly brush center of one side of parchment paper with olive oil. Place the salmon on top and spoon approximately 2 ounces of lobster love sauce over the top of salmon.

Follow these directions to fold the parchment.

Place the parchment-wrapped packet on baking sheet and bake in preheated 375º oven for 15 minutes. Place each packet on individual dinner plates and let your guests tear open the steaming parchment and breathe in the incredible aroma!

Your valentine will love you!

Cool Seafood Recipes for HOT Summer Evenings

Friday, July 15th, 2011 | posted by mike

The dog days of summer are upon us. It’s hot as heck and not all of us want to slave over a hot stove or grill. Quick, easy, healthful and tasty seafood salads are just perfect this time of year. And luckily, we have all the great seafood and fish on hand to put together a refreshing, simple dish that will be an ideal accompaniment to a glass of wine and a relaxing, sultry summer night.

It can be as easy as flaking some smoked fish over mixed greens with a simple vinaigrette. Poached salmon tossed with a little sour cream, yogurt, dijon mustard, lemon, chopped cucumber and fresh dill is perfect summertime fare. Try some boiled shrimp, lobster meat, or crabmeat and just add a touch of mayo, lemon, chopped celery and onion, maybe a little fresh tarragon and a dash of Tabasco, serve on a bed of lettuce or on a roll. Blacken a fillet of bluefish and serve it over a Caesar salad. Squid or octopus salads are always a hit. Simply boil (squid for 2 min.-octopus for 45 min.), cool, make a light oregano vinaigrette and serve with tomatoes and onions. Creating a great vinaigrette is a cinch. All you need is extra virgin olive oil and a good vinegar.

Pantry Essentials
Some of the essentials in our pantry are Thai sweet chili sauce, sriracha sauce, Thai roasted chili paste, Thai red curry paste, Thai fish sauce (nuoc mam), ponzu (a citrus, soy, bonito sauce), Kikkoman ponzu is available at Monahan’s, pickled and fresh ginger, mango chutney, dijon mustard, Tiger sauce and Lizano sauce (from Costa Rica). We use fresh fruits, lemons, oranges, mangos and lots of limes in many vinaigrettes. Curry powder, cumin powder and a good assortment of dried herbs (we buy fresh herbs and chiles as needed). You can go for the sweet and spicy or the tart and tangy. For seafood salads I usually use white or rice wine vinegar.

From there you can get as wild and crazy as you want. Just experiment and have fun with it! If you still don’t feel like cooking, we usually have a few seafood salads ready to take home at the market.

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Bernie's Maine Lobster Salad

Friday, October 8th, 2010 | posted by wendy

This is a great recipe to make to your own taste…we’ve included ingredients and ratios, but you can customize it to your liking. We sell lobster meat by the pound if you don’t want to cook one.

Lobster meat (cooked)
minced onion (or scallion)
finely chopped celery
mayonnaisse
fresh lemon juice
Tabasco sauce

Put lobster meat into a bowl, add just a wee bit of minced onion, a bit more of the finely chopped celery. Add the amount of mayo and a little lemon juice you until the the mixture has a consistency you like. Add a dash of Tabasco.

Serve on a toasted, buttered hot dog bun with some nice lettuce. Nothing could be finer!

Paella a la Valencia

Thursday, July 29th, 2010 | posted by wendy

A spectacular medley of colors and tastes — Spain’s world famous rice dish.  Vary this recipe as you wish. Different types of shellfish, pork and poultry can be added … just be sure to keep the basic proportions the same:

• 10 – 15” paella pan
• 1/2 tsp. Spanish saffron threads
• Approximately 6 cups of Monahan’s fish stock (or homemade chicken stock boiled with shrimp shells)
• 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
• 12 large shrimp in the shell
• 2-3 links Spanish chorizo sausage, cut into 1/4 inch slices
• 6-8 chicken thighs or a cut-up chicken cut into about 12 pieces
• Approximately 3 cups of Valencian rice (unwashed)
• 24 Pacific Manila clams or 18 small littleneck clams*
• course salt to taste
• 12 whole langostinos (lobsterettes), or 2 lobsters (1 1/4 lbs., split and divided into tail sections and claws), or 3 lobster tails (split)* 6-8 oz. each
• 18 mussels (scrubbed and bearded)**
• 6 Spanish pimentos (roasted red peppers) coarsely chopped or in strips

• sprigs of fresh parsley
• about a cup of frozen peas
• 3 lemons cut into wedges

VIDEO HERE!

The paella is traditionally cooked outdoors over a grill, but it can certainly be cooked indoors too.  You may need to use 2 burners on the stove if the larger paella pan is being used. (Check shellfish details at the bottom of this recipe if cooking indoors.)

Simmer 1/2 tsp. of saffron threads in the fish stock for 30 minutes, then set aside to use later.

Place paella pan over heat source (high heat if cooking indoors).  When the pan is hot, add the olive oil.  When oil is hot (but not smoking), add the shrimp, split lobster tails and scallops and sauté for 4-5 minutes or until the scallops are seared and shrimp is almost cooked through.  Remove the seafood and set aside.Add the chicken to the hot pan and season with a liberal amount of course salt and brown on all sides. Once chicken is browned, add the chorizo sausage and simmer for a few minutes, then add about 1/2 cup of rice for each serving, and stir to coat with oil.  Add a pinch of salt and sauté the rice for about 4-5 minutes, or until it starts to turn transparent.  Begin to ladle the saffron and stock (reserved from before) in slowly, about 1 cup or stock for each 1/2 cup of rice used.  Without stirring, let the rice cook until it is about half done (about 5 minutes or until rice is soft and semi-transparent) arrange the clams and mussels — seam side down — in a ring around the edge of the pan.  After a few minutes, lay the shrimp, scallops and the pimentos in the middle of the paella, and the langostinos/lobster as points running out of the center (like a compass).  Garnish the paella with peas and parsley.  When the rice is al dente and the clams and mussels have opened, remove the paella from heat and serve. Serves 6.

* You can also garnish the dish with a whole cooked lobster (steamed separately) rather than split lobster tails cooked in the paella (as pictured)

** Because of the thickness of littleneck clam shells, we recommend that you steam them until just open in advance, because they are unlikely to open in an uncovered pot.  Manila clams have a thinner shell, so they should open according to the recipe.

*** Mussels will open using this method if cooked over an outdoor grill.  However, if you are cooking the paella over the stove (inside), we recommend that you steam the mussels until just open before adding to the paella.