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Posts Tagged ‘shrimp’

The Secret to Georgia Wild Shrimp

In Freshliest Catch on January 13, 2012 at 9:40 pm

The food scene in Brunswick, GA is nothing too impressive. Your local Captain D’s is the biggest competition in “restaurants” (how DARE I qualify Captain D’s as a restaurant) because every one down here wants one thing – fried seafood. However, there is a secret to the fresh seafood caught off shore of the Golden Isles. It’s not that the critters come from waters that are overly polluted with cancer-inducing chemicals from the paper mills and what not around the southeast Georgia coast. It’s not because Jekyll Island is the second biggest breeding ground for sharks aside from the Great Barrier Reef. Most assuredly, it’s not because Iguana’s Seafood spent $175,000 advertising that they were voted #1 for having the best shrimp – because they don’t.

Corporate, non-locally owned restaurants do not get the freshliest catch of shrimp straight from the St. Simon’s Sound or St. Andrew’s Bay. Who do we thank for this? Thailand. They’ve made an industry in America by selling us cheap, translucent shrimp which we over season, over cook, over batter, and over rate. Most people are indulging in rubber shrimp that have been so over cooked you might as well have eaten a tennis ball for a meal and see how much you can feel it bouncing around in your stomach.

The local restaurants, the ones that use OUR LOCAL fisherman, Wesley Dickey- are the ones with award-winning shrimp. Yes, I will boast about the restaurant I work with because they are without a doubt, the best damn shrimp I have ever eaten.

Who do we thank? Nature. God. Buddha. The Force. Whatever you think makes this world turn on its pretty little axle, because they beautifully littered the southeast Georgia coast with spartina grass.

How in the world is spartina grass the answer to the best locally caught seafood? Let me get just a little bit scientific on you. Spartina Alterniflora, also known as “cord grass”, thrives along coastal salt marshes and other habitats that are high in salinity. Out of the three varieties of spartina marsh grasses, (I’m about to throw an intense word at you, so I won’t bother you with their scientific names) the variety off of coastal Georgia contains the osmolyte DMSP.

Dimethylsulphoniopropionate. Yes. That word. What this certain osmolyte (helps with osmosis and water retention) does is keep a healthy balance of water in areas of high salinity. It keeps the grass strong and provides important B vitamins and amino acids for animal growth.

Ok, that was even too scientific for me. Basically, spartina grass is a member of the sugar cane family. See where I’m going here? It provides the greatest amount of food when it dies. Decomposed spartina grass is consumed by the shrimp (and other creepy crawlers of the ocean) and is not only healthy for them, but also makes them naturally SWEETER.

It didn’t seem possible at first. How could the flavor of a shrimp be that noticeable? We did a blind taste test with three different shrimp (a set of steamed, fried, and grilled) and it wasn’t even a question which shrimp was Wesley Dickey’s locally caught shrimp.

Support your local fisherman and you’ll never know what kind of secrets you’ll learn. Even if it’s as something as simple as Spartina Grass.

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To see how delicious the shrimp look cooked, check out The “Rah Bar”!

Don’t eat the yellow snow,
Coleman

Vegetable & Shrimp Tempura

In Uncategorized on November 16, 2011 at 3:52 pm

I don’t know what it is but Asian food really is my favorite. So I looked through the Williams-Sonoma Asian Cookbook and decided to make Vegetable and Shrimp Tempura for dinner.

I’d normally make my own beer-batter tempura, but there’s a neat little authentic Vietnamese restaurant in Brunswick called Pho #1, and they have an Asian market attached to the restaurant. Just mumbling through the items on the shelves – literally mumbling – does anyone else feel like because it’s written in English if you say it you automatically understand it? Yea, you won’t. I came across a tempura batter mix called Bot Chien Tom Va Chuoi. No idea what it means, but I thought I’d check it out.

Pre-prepared mixes that only require the addition of water, normally always needs tweaking. After adding the water it asked for, it was still the consistency of bread dough- so then I started to play with it. I threw in a few shots of La Croix soda water, to help aerate the tempura, and a few shots of beer. The carbonation in these ingredients help keep a lighter tempura and make a better breading. I also threw in a few ice cubes. Keeping your tempura batter extra cold helps it stick better to whatever you’re frying. When I finally got to the right consistency, it was a little thicker than pancake batter. I also added a few spices to my liking: cayenne, onion, salt, white pepper, and granulated garlic. The recipe below is just an average, easy tempura batter, so feel free to add what you want for flavor.

Ingredients:

Tempura Batter:
9 oz All Purpose flour
4 tbsp cornstarch
1, 12 ounce can La Croix Soda Water
1, 12 ounce Bud Light
1 egg yolk

For the fryer:
1 bottle oil- peanut, vegetable or canola
1 zucchini
1 portobella mushroom (or some baby button mushrooms)
3 scallions
6 baby carrots, halved
1/2 pound Wild Georgia Shrimp

For the dipping sauce:
1 fresh lime
1 cup dashi
1 cup water
1 cup sugar
1 cup soy sauce
1 cup of or other rice vinegar

For the Tempura Batter, mix all ingredients together, thoroughly. If it has chunks, you will have little balls of dry flour and cornstarch and it doesn’t look as good. Keep it in the fridge until you are ready to cook.

For the Sauce, it’s basically like a teriyaki sauce, with a fresh squeezed lime to tang up the flavor. Also, the dashi adds quite a different flavor as well. You can’t normally buy dashi, but it’s basically a fish stock. Most people might get grossed out by this but I don’t care, you don’t have to add this to your sauce, but you should live a little and just see how it turns out. To make it, take about 10 whole anchovies and sear them off in a pan until they are really hot and crackling. Once seared on both sides, add 2 cups of water and boil until you only have a cup of water left. Strain it and there you go – dashi. Personally, I seared off half that many anchovies and used some anchovy juice instead. The sauce is easy. Throw all the ingredients together and simply reduce the sauce to your preferred consistency. For those of you who don’t know what a reduction, or redux, sauce is- it’s simply a sauce that has been reduced by cooking out the water, which is why the longer it cooks, the thicker it gets.

While the sauce is reducing, go ahead and heat your oil up to around 325 degrees. Putting an eye on med high, then lowering it to medium is normally a good way to go to get the right temperature. Want to know how to check the oil? Run your fingers under water, and flick a very tiny amount of water in the oil- you’ll know the difference in temperature by the crackling the oil makes. Be careful not to let it splash on you, it will burn.

What I did with my vegetables is pretty standard, but you can cut them however you like. I cut the portabella in thick strips and just halved the baby carrots. Yes, baby carrots are a little more expensive, but they’re already peeled and the shape stays consistent. I cut the zucchini in flat slabs and halved the length; however, I would suggest cutting them about 1/4 an inch thick on a bias (diagonal cut).

Now frying tempura vegetables you have a few options before you drop the vegetable or shrimp in the tempura batter. One approach, which I used, is a lot cleaner than the other and it involves dredging your ingredient in flour before you drop it in the tempura batter. Dredging means just tossing your ingredient in flour. The flour sticks to the moisture giving it an additional little layer. The messier way, will provide more flavor.

The second pre-tempura process involves an egg wash. Take four eggs and mix it with equal parts water- or half water and half buttermilk if you have it! Mix it up with a fork and drench your ingredient in the wash, dredge it in flour, then cook it in your hot oil.

It takes a hot second dipping and frying and what not so I started out with the carrots. Because they take longer to cook, they don’t lose their heat. After that I went ahead and fried the zucchini and mushrooms, and ended with the shrimp. For the vegetables, let them fry for about 3 – 4 minutes, until they have a nice golden crust. The shrimp only need about 2-3 minutes. Over cooking shrimp make them taste rubbery so don’t over cook them!

For a nice garnish, keep two of the scallions whole and fry them whole- it will look really nice. Also, save the last one and cut it on a bias for garnish. After you plate your vegetables, pour a little of the sauce on top, and sprinkle the cut green onions. Here’s how mine turned out..

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Always hungry,
Coleman

The “Rah” Bar, a true rarity..

In Review on November 14, 2011 at 11:40 pm

If you ever have a day off, need to get out of Brunswick for a few hours, or are tired of the scene on St. Simon’s Island – I have the perfect place for you to go, The “Rah” Bar on Jekyll Island. During the day it is known as “Cafe on the Wharf” and turns into the “Rah” Bar at night.

Located on the Jekyll Wharf, the Rah Bar serves fresh oysters (raw or steamed), mudpuppies (crawfish), Wild Georgia Shrimp, and Dungeness crab legs- as well as low country boils, BBQ sandwiches, and Dangerous Dawgs. Sides include potato chips, sausages, red potatoes, and sweet corn.

I’ve eaten shrimp and crab legs in many different cities: Memphis, New Orleans, Malibu, Charleston, and Savannah, just to name a few, but none compare to the steamed shrimp and crab legs prepared at the Rah Bar. The Wild Georgia Shrimp that are brought in daily from the shrimp boats docked on the pier, and the crab legs are beautiful large Dungeness crabs, not Snow Crab legs. They are steamed perfectly and sprinkled with the Rah Bar’s secret blend of spices. They are absolutely delicious. People come to the Rah Bar every year just to have their fresh seafood, and the plates are accompanied with cocktail sauce, a spicy hot butter sauce, and fresh cut lemons.

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Aside from the spectacular service and atmosphere, the sunset is absolutely divine. On most days of the week, this is the sunset you would set eyes on while eating a pound of peel-and-eat shrimp and delighting yourself in one of the Rah Bar’s specialty drinks, the “Rah” Rum Smash (I challenge you to try it before you know what’s in it).

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The Rah Bar also just started a great Happy Hour! Monday through Friday, 4pm-6pm, it’s $2 domestic beer, $3 glasses of house wine, $4 well cocktails, and $10 for a bucket of beer (6 domestics)! Not to mention Thursday – Sunday they have live music on the pier. It really is the perfect place to enjoy life to its fullest.

So come have a “Rah” Bar Margarita, snack on some shrimp, get lost in paradise, and prove that I’m wrong!

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