I can get a little intrigued by recipes, and though none come
to mind just now some of them that sound bad simply are bad. Some are bad but
you see possibilities. Some you just have to try in spite of knowing they can’t
be right. Adapt them. Make them right.
I subscribe to a few on-line food blogs, some by friends and
some by people such as Ruth Reichl, the former restaurant critic and head of
Gourmet Magazine. The New York Times has one called What to cook this week that
appears in my inbox a few times a week. Last week they had a technique that
they said was for those gawdawful store-bought winter tomatoes (first, of
course, they had to give us a lecture on how sick and tired they were of the
‘eat local’ imperative): halve them and put them in a casserole, add some herbs
and a Bunch of olive oil – way too much, like 5 or 6 cups (who would do that?)
and roast them at 250° for a couple of hours. Well, I would never go out and
buy 2 ½ pounds of grocery store tomatoes but I had a 2.5 pound package of end-of-season
Pratico tomatoes that hadn’t been perfectly ripe when I froze them, and I got
them out and halved them and put them in a clay casserole and sprinkled them
with rosemary, bay leaf, and thyme, 6 whole, peeled cloves of garlic, a couple
of slices of ginger, then poured over maybe a cup and a half of olive oil. Roasted
them for a couple of hours.
The result was about 2 cups of jammy tomatoes, about 1+ cup
of tomato-y olive oil, and a couple of cups of tomato broth. A long time ago – in
the parlance of credulous seekers of whatever was new— it was called tomato
water and it made a big ‘splash’, ha ha, but I will simply call it tomato
broth.
A lot of the jammy tomatoes were smeared onto a pizza, along
with a drizzle of the tomato-y olive oil, but what was really good were some
cod loins that I seared in the tomato olive oil, then plopped into bowls of the
tomato broth along with some of the tomatoes and some of the buckwheat noodles
called soba. Now that was delicious.
What are cod loins, you ask. This, from Great British Chefs: “As
cod can be a large fish, the fillet is often too big for a single portion. It
is therefore possible to buy the cod loin, which is cut from the middle section
or fattest part of the fillet. Succulent loins are short and fat compared to
longer cod fillets and they are considered the prime cut.” Doh!
This circumvents the problem of cooking the skinny end – the
mermaid fin – along with the fat breast meat of a regular fillet, the mermaid
swisher needing far less time to cook than the brawny chest. The loin, for the
privileged few, for a buck more, is a piece of cod about 1 ½ inches square and
maybe 4 inches long. It is amazing how good fresh well-treated fish can taste
when done right.
You can find these at Green Mountain Fresh on State Street
across from the courthouse in Rutland. GMF really is the place to buy your
fresh fish nowadays – Boston Harbor one day, on your dinner table the next. They
have frozen and farmed fish, too. I usually prefer frozen fish, as they are
flash frozen on the ship when caught, but these are so fresh... why take that
extra step. The E-Z Peel shrimp are more
delicious than I like to say, and they are farmed in Ecuador. What makes them
so delicious? I wonder!
And I’m not saying this because John gave us passes to the
Boston Seafood Show in a couple of weeks, either.
Anyway, that little fish stew/soup/broth was really good.
If you have some frozen whole tomatoes or want to buy some at
the grocery store or hydroponic ones from somewhere fairly close, try out
roasting them with quite a bit of olive oil and garlic and herbs as I outlined
above. And use them any way you like. But do try this:
Cod loins in Tomato Broth
(serves 2)
- 3 tablespoons tomato olive oil
- 1 lb cod loins cut in squares
- 3 cups tomato broth (you can
flesh what you have out with chicken broth or other veggie broth
- some pinches of the jammy
tomatoes
- 6 large green olives, pitted
- 3 scallions cut diagonally
including the green tops
- a small bunch of cilantro,
chopped finely
- 3 ounces soba (buckwheat)
noodles cooked to package directions
Heat the oven to 375°.
Heat the olive oil in a hot sauté pan over medium heat,
scatter in the cod loins, let them cook for a minute and turn them. they’ll get
slightly brown on all 4 sides. Don’t cook them too much. Take from the heat.
Add the broth, the tomatoes and the green olives. Place in the oven for 15 to
20 minutes. Don’t overcook the cod. Make sure they’re still translucent in the
center.
Meanwhile, cook the noodles. The usual directions are to add
them to a sufficient amount of boiling water (not 7 gallons as the package
says, but sufficient) and cook for 5 minutes, drain, refresh in cold water and
drain again.
Ready to serve? Divide the noodles into two bowls. Divide the
cod and broth into two bowls, scatter with the scallions and cilantro. Eat up.
PS: You may drizzle the hot soup with a little Jeon sauce – equal parts of soy sauce,
rice vinegar and sesame oil.
Adaptation – it’s the name of the game!
snimtz@gmail.com
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