Grilled Soft Shell Crab

Friday, May 11th, 2012 | posted by mike

Although the classic preparation for soft shell crab is pan-fried, this is a great variation for summer. Super easy. Just serve with the dipping sauce of your choice or a simple squeeze of lemon.grilled soft shell crab

  • Soft Shell Crabs
  • Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Lemon Juice
  • Sale & Pepper to Taste

Clean your soft shell crabs or have your fish monger do it for you. (VIDEO)

Heat your grill and make sure it is clean and oiled. Brush the crabs with olive oil, season with salt & pepper and place them on the grill at a 45 degree angle so that the claws and legs are not hanging down below the grate. Grill the crabs for about 4 minutes per side. Remove to a platter and serve with lemon wedges and the dipping sauce of your choice: cocktail, tartar, peanut, etc., all available at Monahan’s.

The Soft and Beautiful Swimmers are Back!

Thursday, May 10th, 2012 | posted by mike

softshell crab-lisa monahan photographyIt’s May and Chesapeake soft shell crabs are in the house! My wife, Lisa, is so happy, her favorite thing in the world has returned. What could be better than to take one of the world’s most delicious crabs (blue crabs) and be able to enjoy not just the sweet chunky meat but also the entire crab right down to the crispy claws, legs, and paddle fins. In May 2010′s blog post we talked about the painstaking work that the watermen have to go through to get these delicacies to our tables. But what about the crab’s life and what they go through in this whole process?

Monahan's Seafood Market | Beautiful SwimmersThe amazing story of the love life of Callinectes, Greek for beautiful swimmer, Sapidus, Latin for savory, is a noble and romantic tale…
A male, Jimmy, will approach a female, or Sook after molting, knowing that she is about to peel (molt). While trying to entice her with a sexy dance on the tips of his legs, he sways tall, waving his claws around, even flipping backwards and kicking up sand! If she thinks he’s worthy she’ll sway to and fro and wave her claws around. After displaying the love dance for a bit she’ll decide whether or not to succumb. If she is taken by him she will turn around and back up under his body where they will click claws for a time until things settle down a bit. He then clasps his legs around her, cradling and carrying her, while searching for a safe place for her to molt for up to a week. He stays with her not only to protect her during this very vulnerable time but also to make sure that he is with her at the moment she peels—and it’s time for some lovin’. Gently he flips her over to begin mating followed by another 48 hours or so of cradling and carrying until her shell hardens. What a crab will go through for a little romance!

As you can see there is a very short window of opportunity to harvest soft crabs. Watermen know how to read for coloration or a reddish line on the paddle fins when crabs are getting ready to peel. Stored in holding tanks they must be monitored 24 hours a day until they peel. After which they are taken out of the water where they cease to harden and are shipped off to market. This is why soft shell crabs are such an expensive (although we’re seeing some great prices right now) and wonderful seasonal treat.

If you would like to read the most comprehensive blue crab book ever, check out William W. Warners, Beautiful Swimmers, Watermen, Crabs and the Chesapeake Bay. It’s a classic.

Cooking soft crabs is easy. As far as I’m concerned the best way to prepare them is either pan fried, deep fried, or grilled. We often grill them and here’s a simple recipe. Enjoy!

Grilled Soft Shell Crab

VIDEO: How to Clean a Soft Shell Crab

Shad Roe

Thursday, May 19th, 2011 | posted by wendy

Here’s a simple preparation for the once-a year treat, Shad Roe! The shad is a member of the herring family, and like salmon, they return from the ocean each year to mate. Both the fish (which is quite bony) and the roe are highly prized in the mid-Atlantic states, and we have customers who faithfully flock to our counter each April for this highly-anticipated regional specialty you can’t get anywhere else in town.

  • 1 set of Shad Roe
  • flour for dredging
  • salt & pepper
  • 4 strips of bacon
  • lemon wedges
  • 1/2 stick butter (clarified)
  • capers & parsley (optional)

Clarify the butter by warming over low heat and skimming the white solids off the surface until you are left with a clear, golden liquid.

Heat clarified butter in a pan over medium heat until it is sizzling hot. Gently place the roe in the pan, cook for about 4 minutes a side or until just opaque in the center. Be sure to partially cover the with a lid or a splatter screen because sometimes the roe can explode during cooking.

Serve with bacon and lemon wedges on the side (or with some capers quickly cooked in the pan with a bit of lemon juice and parsley). This dish is also traditionally served with a simple broiled fillet of shad on the side.

We shot a video of Mike removing a set of shad roe from a shad…it’s a little visceral, but if you’re into that kind of thing accompanied by a soundtrack of “Let’s Do It (let’s fall in love)” by Cole Porter and performed by Louis Armstrong and Oscar Peterson, this is your lucky day!

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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.

The Bluefish are running, and the Martha's Vineyard Derby starts on 9/12!

Thursday, September 9th, 2010 | posted by mike

Mike Monahan's illustration of a bluefish

Bluefish are amazing. Besides being a great food fish, they are one of my favorite game fish—hard hitters, good fighters and pretty easy to find and catch. When I lived in Connecticut in the early 1970s we would catch small “snapper” blues in the spring on spinner baits. I’ll never forget the first one I caught, it couldn’t have been over 8″ long. I tried to remove the spinner and ended up with a good “snap” on my index finger and it bled like crazy. That little bugger had teeth like a piranha!

Those little blues will chomp their way into adulthood eating anything and everything. Schools of bluefish will attack any baitfish, squid or shrimp, leaving trails of blood and half-eaten pieces of their prey. The gulls and sea birds follow the schools for leftovers which makes it easy for fishermen to spot them and just cast into the birds and, “BAM! Fish on!” We also had to troll for blues using lures or plugs (always with steel leader because of their razor sharp teeth). It was lots of fun and good times.

If you’d like to learn more about bluefish, you should pick up a copy of a great book called Blues by John Hersey written in 1987. The famous author lived on Martha’s Vineyard and he fished for blues there for years. In the book, he meets a land-lubbing stranger on the dock and invites him into his fishing world…taking him out all summer and teaching him not just about bluefish and how to catch them, but he brings up a new subject every day that touches on sports fishing, commercial fishing, conservation, ecology, and life on the water. He also includes a poem pertaining to the subject of the day and some simple recipes. The book also includes amazing illustrations by James Baker, which are really great too. You’ll appreciate Hersey’s respect and awe of these fish. As much as he loved to catch and eat them, he never took more than he needed for dinner.

And speaking of Martha’s Vineyard and bluefish, September 12 marks the opening of the Martha’s Vineyard Striped Bass and Bluefish Derby, which has been going strong since just after World War II. Today’s derby attracts fishermen from all around the world and participation in recent years has approached or touched 2,000. What I wouldn’t give to surf cast for a few blues off the Wasque Point on Chappaquiddick.

While I dream of surf-casting, we still can get our fill of blues around here…we get them shipped in whole several times a week, as fresh as if they came out of Lake Michigan! As I mentioned in the beginning of this post, those bluefish are voracious eaters, and we have fun sometimes checking out their “last supper” when we fillet. Amazing. We shot a video last fall here that will give you an idea of their ferocity.

VIDEO: Mike Monahan explores the belly of a bluefish

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The Simplest Lake Superior Whitefish

Thursday, August 5th, 2010 | posted by wendy

• Whitefish (1/2 lb. per person or so)
• lemon
• butter
• fresh Italian flat-leaf parsley
• course salt & freshly cracked black pepper.

Lay the whitefish fillets on a baking sheet and dot with a little butter, salt and pepper.  Bake at 425° for 10-12 minutes or until opaque throughout.

Top with chopped fresh parsley and lemon zest. Serve with additional lemon wedges.

VIDEO: Mike Monahan Presents The Simplest Lake Superior Whitefish

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Whole Bluefish Roasted in Kosher Salt

Friday, June 18th, 2010 | posted by wendy

1 2-4 lb. bluefish*, gutted and gilled
1 lemon sliced in thin rounds
an assortment of herbs
black pepper
a few cloves of garlic
1-2 BOXES of Kosher Salt.

VIDEO of this recipe available on YouTube!

Preheat oven to 500°.

Pour a box of kosher salt into a bowl and combine with about a half cup of water. Mix together until it has a consistency of slightly damp sand. Put down a layer of this salt mixture into a roasting pan large enough to accommodate the fish.

Meanwhile, stuff the cavity of the fish with herbs, lemon, garlic and black pepper. Lay it across the salt layer, then bury the fish completely (using as much of the salt/water combo as necessary…you may need a second box of salt).

Roast salt encrusted fish for about 20 minutes, then check with an insta-read thermometer jammed through the salt and into the thickest part of the fish flesh. Once the temperature reads 125, break away the hardened sarcophogus of salt, brushing the skin clean, and simply carve the flesh from the first side of the fish. Once you reach the middle, you can pull out the main fish bone in one piece to access the second side of the fish encased in the bottom layer of salt.

Serve with Salpicon Sauce

*substitutes: Porgy, Snapper, Cod, Trout, Spanish Mackerel, Sea Bass, Fresh Sardines…pretty much any whole fish. Size will affect roasting time so use that thermometer!


The WHOLE Fish (and nothing but the fish)

Thursday, June 17th, 2010 | posted by Monahan's

Ever prepare a whole grilled bronzini or a whole steamed walleye or black sea bass with ginger garlic scallions and maybe some black bean sauce? How about a whole baked snapper Vera Cruz with the famous tomato, green chili sauce or grilled orata stuffed with fennel? Ever taste the sweet, succulence of a whole grilled sardine with coarse salt and a good olive oil, or laid out a whole poached salmon served at room temperature with a cucumber yogurt dill sauce? Would you like to mix up the flavor and textures of a grilled trout with lemons, herbs and wrapped in pancetta? Have you experienced the satisfaction of whacking a whole salt-encrusted roasted bluefish and savored the moist richness trapped inside?

VIDEO: How to Roast a WHOLE Bluefish in Salt.

Pablo Picasso photographed by David Douglas Duncan

Many of us have “bone phobia” and wouldn’t dream of attempting to prepare the whole fish at home, but a little practice with a butter knife or a spoon and soon you’ll see that the fish will almost fillet itself as you gently slide the meat off the bone. If you pull the fins off the small bones under the fins will follow. The rib bones can be a little tricky but just take your time and the meat between them will be worth the effort.

Here are just a few advantages of serving the whole fish:

Flavor. Ever notice the extra flavor of a whole chicken that comes with roasting along with the fat in the bones and skin? It’s the same for fish.

Value. There’s more to a fish than just the two fillets! The head with the cheeks and collar have lots of extra meat.

Health. The fat in fish is where all the good stuff is. The head and belly are the richest parts of the fish—containing the most goodness, flavor and healthful Omega 3 fats. The bones of small whole fish such as smelt, sardine and anchovies are full of calcium.

Beauty. There’s nothing more beautiful or aesthetically pleasing than a simply garnished and perfectly presented whole fish on a platter.

The Ritual. The process of serving and eating the whole fish is like a special celebration. It forces you to take your time and appreciate, enjoy and savor every part of the fish.

Variety of Flavor & Textures. In China, the lady of the house is often served the cheeks because it really is the best part—firm textured, almost like a scallop. All the meat around the head has lots of flavor and texture going on. There is a nice chunk of firm (often darker) meat under the pectoral fin. The belly is always rich and you can work you way back to the leaner tail section.

At Monahan’s we’re always offering our customers lots of whole fish with recipes and ideas for every cooking method. Whether you’ve been eating fish off the bone your whole life or you’re a novice who wants to enhance your quality of life, we’ve got a fish for you. Come in and we’ll make it easy. We’ll even cook up a whole fish out of the case and serve it on a platter for lunch.

See you at the market!