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Tuesday 23 April 2013

Rick Stein's book - My Kitchen Table - 100 Fish and Seafood Recipes.


My Kitchen Table   is a new collection of high-quality cookery books featuring mouth-watering recipes from the nation’s favourite chefs - Ainsley Harriott, Annabel Karmel, Antonio Carluccio, Gizzi Erskine, Ken Hom, Madhur Jaffrey, Mary Berry, Raymond Blanc, Rick Stein, Rosemary Conley and Sophie Grigson. I found out about this super series by accident and feel compelled to spread the word. Phil.

I have just purchased the Rick Stein edition and I love it. This is Rick's 100 Fish and Seafood recipes, from simple suppers to pasta and rice dishes to ' food for friends' all complied from the best recipes from his publications, Rick Stein's Seafood (2001), French Odyssey (2005), Mediterranean Escapes (2007) Coast to Coast (2008) and Far EasternOdyssey (2009).



I'm not going to list all one hundred of the recipes but to highlight those that I feel are inspiring to me and therefore those that I may well try to cook and enjoy. My images in this blog are random and an effort to illustrate my excitement over this compilation. I think that I may well purchase Raymond Blanc's version and the baking book by Mary Berry if this book is anything to go by. The price was excellent by the way; just a fiver and no postage added! Feel free to use this link if you fancy ordering a copy for yourself. The link in red at the top of the page will get you to all the titles on Amazon.


                                                                           


Rick's book covers: Soup and Starters, Light Bites and Lunches, Rice, Pasta and Noodles, Simple Suppers, Food For Friends.



From the Soups and Starters I particularly liked the look and the relative low cost of producing the dishes of:
  • Sardines stuffed with pine nuts, currants, capers, parsley and orange zest.

  • Crab and sweetcorn soup.

  • Spiced octopus salad with parsley.

  • Seafood tempura

  • Squid fried in olive oil with smoked pimentón and garlic mayonnaise.

  • Razor clams a la plancha

  • Oysters with sauce mignonette
 

From the Light Bites and Lunches section I fancied making the:
  • Gravlax (Dill cured salmon).

  • Devilled mackerel with mint and tomato salad.

  • Eggs Benedict with smoked haddock.

  • Japanese fish cakes with ginger and spring onions.

  • Crab with rocket, basil and lemon olive oil.

  • Sashimi of salmon, tuna, sea bass and scallops.

  • Warm mussel and potato salad with pistou.

  • Seared scallops with lentils and a tomato and Herbes de Provence dressing.
 

My selection from the Rice, Pasta and Noodles dishes is:
  • Crab Linguine with parsley and chilli.

  • Seafood lasagne.

  • Mussels in Pilau rice with a coconut, cucumber and tomato relish.

  • Nasi Goreng with mackerel.

  • Roasted sea bass with Pastis and an Arborio rice risotto.

  • Provençal fish pasta with fennel seeds, anchovies, tomatoes and olive oil.

  • Fish pie

  • Seafood couscous.

  • Tortilla of salt cod and sweet onions and potatoes.
 

From the Simple Suppers section I really liked the look and sound of:

  • Moules Marinieres with cream, garlic and parsley.

  • Coconut chilli prawns with cumin puris.

  • Portuguese barbecued sardines with piri-piri oil.

  • Monkfish with saffron and roasted red pepper dressing.


                                                                      My food DVDs

From Food For Friends I would relish making any of the recipes below:
  • Grilled cod with aioli and butter beans.

  • Grilled scallops with a pumpkin seed, Serrano chilli and coriander sauce.

  • Baked sea bass with roasted red peppers, tomatoes, anchovies and potatoes.

  • Fillets of John Dory with capers, olives and rosemary.

I can almost smell the lovely fresh fish cooking on the grill with additional tantalising aromas of garlic and chilli and smoked pimentón. As Rick often says “Delish!”

3 comments:

Jean said...

I have looked at the Rick Stein book a few times and managed to resist.
These little books are absolute bargains I think. The Mary Berry one in particular contains a lot of the recipes from her much more expensive Baking Bible.

(PS, I have sent you an email.)

Unknown said...

I bet you've got quite a collection of books & DVDs on your shelves now. A different recipe for every day of the year

Karenjane said...

His books are mouth wateringly good. I prefer fish to meat any day, & buy boxes of fish from somewhere in Cornwall every now & then. When I can get it, John Dory is a favourite, & looks so pretty. Gurnard is another good, more unusual fish. And I think I still have some of that in my freezer....so that's dinner sorted for tomorrow.