
I'm working on inventing some recipes that I hope will be edible blends of Welsh and other cuisines, so this year for St. David's Day I wanted to do a seafood cawl.
Outside the Pacific NW, salmon is considered our "national" cuisine and if you tell people on the east coast that you're a Portlander but you don't like it, they seem disappointed. I never did like it until I moved to the east coast for a while and couldn't get it and that lead me to appreciate what a really fantastic thing good, fresh, wild salmon is, so I wanted to create a "cawl" with salmon. Ceri demanded mussels (ala Mussels Meirionnydd), so that's what he got and it's not Pacific Rim without sourdough bread, in my opinion.
After I made this, I was fortunate enough to find Welsh Shellfish Cawl on the Visit Wales site, and that looks really fantastic so I want to try making that next. If you try this recipe, let me know what you think!
Preheat oven to 350F.
Bring water or vegetable stock to a boil. Add onions, carrot, rutabaga and salt and pepper and reduce heat to simmer one hour.
In separate saucepan, saute chopped garlic and three whole cloves for bread with mushrooms until garlic has begun to brown. Reserve whole cloves for bread, add chopped garlic and mushrooms to pot. Add wine and potatoes and simmer another 15-20 minutes until tender. Add herbs, leeks, cabbage, crab meat and salmon until cabbage is tender. Add mussels and cover for about 15 minutes or until shells have fully opened.
While mussels are steaming, cream softened butter for bread with chopped parsley, parmesan and whole cloves garlic. Score bread through to bottom crust in 2' slices, taking care to leave bottom crust attached. Wrap bread in tinfoil, leaving top open, and place on cookie sheet. Spread butter liberally in between slices and bake in 350F oven about 15 minutes or until mussels are done.
Serve hot.
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Comment by Gillian Morgan on July 9, 2011 at 11:18am Thank you, Gaabi, for the recipe. I've not tried it yet, but I'll let you know when I do. Sounds really good, especially the bread.
I've never tried oysters, but I like fresh salmon and smoked.
Cockles featured quite often when I was a child. When we lived in Carmarthen, they were fron the Llansteffan and Ferryside beds.
They were boiled first then fried with minced onions and breadcrumbs. I have tasty memories of them.
Laverbread, which is seaweed, is still available in Carmarthen market. In Cardiff, hotels feature it on thebreakfast menu. It's sprinkled with oatmeal first, then fried in bacon fat. Quite lovely.
I know scallops are popular in the States, but we don't see too many of them here.
I am not a very fishy person.
Last year, in Cannes, South of France, though, I had some huge sardines for supper. We eat our evening meal in the same place and I'd had sardines in this restaurant the previous year.
Hoping to be there again last week of August. Let you know how I get on. (Spaghetti Arabiatta is very good in this place, too).
Comment by Gaynor Madoc Leonard on February 23, 2011 at 10:29am
Comment by Ceri Shaw on February 22, 2011 at 11:32pm
Comment by Ceri Shaw on February 22, 2011 at 11:22pm
Comment by gaabi on February 22, 2011 at 6:32pm |
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