















First seven days had some hits and misses. Maybe the favorite was the New Year’s Day TJs smoked herring (surprisingly), though the razor clams were a delicious top contender. The pate was a huge disappointment.
The seven-day rundown:
– Smoked herring on toast with crème fraîche, dill, grated cured egg yolk, and pickled cocktail onions (had to get creative using what I had lying around).
– Smoked oysters added to our black eyed peas and greens with leftover rice and some roasted rutabaga thrown in. Like a Hoppin’ John but pescatarian.
– Winter salad with spinach, arugula, Asian pear, roasted root veg and skipjack tuna. The chili crisp and pistachios I added later made a big difference.
– Toast with ricotta, sardines in tomato sauce, cured olives, capers, and grated egg yolk.
– Sardines in mustard sauce on toast, with sliced pear, maple chili “aioli” and dill.
– Langoustine rillettes on focaccia. Added a drizzle of balsamic after. It made it a little better. But meh.
– Smoked salmon chunks on a winter veggie bisque with roasted honeynut and black futsu squash, rutabaga, and roasted chestnuts. This was a great pairing. I’m kicking myself for forgetting to add the rye crisps I bought just for this meal.
– Pasta with razor clams, a quick Romano cream sauce, pistachios and Aleppo. Even good as leftovers the next day.
by Ok-Day9430

4 Comments
Oh… and I know some folks don’t care for Fishwife brand on a philosophical level 😬 but we got a gift pack from a friend and I’m happily trying them out. They have been tasty and I’m not even going to look up what it cost because it’s better if I don’t know.
Looks fantastic!! Yum!
Ooooh love this! Fun suggestion for you, salmon & rice balls –
I just made these and they were fabulous, just got cooked rice, a drained tin of salmon (cost £1), spring onions, chilli, soy sauce & fish sauce formed into balls with 1 or 2 beaten eggs depending on cohesion – I rolled them in crispy bread crumbs and air fried them, absolutely delicious!
I think those with some stir fried veg would be excellent
That hoppin john looks tremendous. I wouldn’t be surprised if back in the day places like Maryland and the coastal Carolinas threw oysters in the pot like that.