Showing posts with label mackerel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mackerel. Show all posts

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Sardines in Tomato Sauce with Olive Oil over Pasta - Video Recipe

In soybean, olive, or sunflower oil - lightly smoked, brined, skippered, and tomato sauced - there is more to canned fish than tuna in plain water. 

I always find small canned fillets cheaply at my local 99c only Store and Dollar Tree including herring, sardine, mackerel, and anchovy. In my cupboard, you will see all of these. And, the tastiest way I've found to use tinned gill-bearing aquatic vertebrates, is sauteed in olive oil and paired with pasta.


Usually in packages smaller than cans of tuna, anywhere from 2 - 4 ounces, these fat finger-sized fillets of fish are perfect for a single after-work dinner serving. Sardines in Tomato Sauce with Olive Oil over Spaghetti is my latest budget entree. It's quick and easy to prepare, and most of all, delectable. What more could you ask for from the fugal Blogger du Cuisine.


This recipe is influenced by our local Queen of Pizza, Nancy Silverton, co-owner/chef (with Maria Batali) of the always-crowded Mozza Pizzeria. She wrote a book a few years ago called "A Twist of the Wrist," where she created a host of entrees using canned and jarred edibles. I'm too cheap to buy the book, but I check it out from my local library when I need inspiration. While this dish is not in it, I like to think she would approve.


If canned sardines come in oil, all you have to do is pour it into a skillet, oil and all, heat through, then add it over freshly cooked pasta. The sardines I used for this recipe came packed in tomato sauce. I could have heated it in the same way, but thought pouring in a couple tablespoons of olive oil would add just the right amount of richness.


I have a friend who hates the taste of fish (he's an official 99 Cent Player and featured in my video here) -- he doesn't know what he is missing. However, I do understand the apprehension of using canned fish. Fish is always marketed as freshly caught, frozen fresh, or farm-raised. That's the best way to get it. While canned tuna is what almost everyone is familiar with; I wanted to try a different tinned protein and found this recipe preparation the best -- especially when I can get it all at the right price!


So next time you run across canned fish on sale, stock up -- and give my Sardines in Tomato Sauce with Olive Oil over Spaghetti a try. It's certainly cheap enough, quick to do, and a tasty change of pace.


Sardines in Tomato Sauce with Olive Oil over Pasta - Video
Play it here. The video runs 2 minutes, 50 seconds.

My YouTube video link for viewing or embedding, just click here.

Ingredients (1 serving)
  • 1/4 to 1/3 package pasta - I used spaghetti, but you could use any type you have on hand.
  • 1 can of fish - a 2 to 4-ounce can. I used a 3.75-ounce tin of Sardines in Tomato Sauce.
  • 2 tablespoons of olive oil - okay to leave out oil for a lite version. If you are using canned fish in oil, then use that oil instead of adding olive oil.
  • 2 tablespoons of dried (or fresh grated) parmesan - optional. To add when serving.
  • Water for boiling pasta

Directions
Start pasta boiling in a pot of water according to package directions. I usually shave off a minute or two of cooking time for al dente pasta. Since this recipe is for a single serving, I use a third of a package of pasta (about 6 ounces.) You can add more pasta if you want to.


In a skillet add olive oil and the can of fish. I've made versions without adding extra oil, too. In the above video, my can of Sardines in Tomato Sauce has olive oil.

You only need to heat up the fish in oil and tomato sauce for about about 2 minutes, over low/medium heat. When fish, oil, and tomato sauce start to simmer, turn it down to the lowest heat.

If the tomato sauce cooks down too much then add a tablespoon or two of water to have more sauce.


Pasta should finish cooking in about the time the fish with sauce is heated through. Put drained pasta on a plate and top it with the fish, oil, and tomato sauce. The fish is delicate because it is already cooked so carefully add it last -- so it doesn't shred into unrecognizable flakes (unless you are squeamish looking at whole fish.) Finally top with dried or freshly shaved parmesan cheese (optional.)


Hindsight
This pasta dish is delish with almost any tinned fish you find on sale, except salted anchovies. (They have typically used one or two fillets at a time to flavor a pasta sauce.) If the fish is stored in oil, then try it with just that -- kind of like my John Cassavetes Red Pepper, Garlic, and Olive Oil with Pasta (click here to see my recipe.) If you want a tomato sauce (and can't find Sardines in Tomato Sauce,) then add half a small can of tomato sauce (that's 4 ounces, from an 8 ounce can) when heating up the fish in oil. If fish is canned in water, then just add the whole thing, and spoon on a couple of tablespoons of olive oil and tomato sauce.

This is a versatile dish, so you could also saute some onion and garlic first, then add the fish. Add lightly steamed broccoli or spinach for some needed freshness to this pasta dish. You can also saute the fish with some favorite fresh herbs (or dried.) And, feel free to use any pasta you have on hand.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Mackerel Potato Salad & A Polo Match - Video

Summer is here and the time is right for potato salad and a picnic. May The 99 Cent Chef recommend a pleasant outing to Will Rogers' Polo Club? Take winding, tree-lined Sunset Boulevard into Pacific Palisades for an equestrian game gazing picnic. And what goes more splendidly with croquet played on horseback than The Chef's Mackerel Potato Salad?

On the first day of summer The Chef took a group including his wife, her parents, and, visiting from Austin, his sister Denise and her husband Dale, to a 9:30 a.m. polo match at Will Rogers State Historical Park. Parking is eight dollars, but well worth it for 4 hours of equestrian entertainment -- the event itself is open to the public and ticket-free. You decamp with your picnic basket and lawn chairs, and yes, beer or wine is allowed, to find a spot along the emerald green field - flanked by a small hill on one side and an eucalyptus tree shaded area next to the announcer's booth on the other side.

If you have not watched a polo match before, think of mallet-wielding soccer players on horseback, dressed ever so elegantly in field boots, thundering down the field swatting at a softball-sized polo ball. You can go to willrogerspolo.org and click here for instructions on the art of the polo match. The main website gives you directions to Will Rogers State Park and Saturday and Sunday polo game times, which run until October.

You can take a break from the polo matches with a hike in the park or a tour of Will Rogers' cowboy-styled residence. Below is the Chef's video visit to a Will Rogers Polo Club Match.
Will Rogers Polo Match - Video

Play it here. The video runs 2 minutes, 29 seconds.


Now on to the main food event -- Mackerel Potato Salad. The Chef offers a German style vinegar/mustard dressing mixed into yellow potatoes and packaged mackerel, both bought on sale at this 99c only Store. You can use any canned fish in water including sardines, salmon, herring or tuna, often on sale at any market. Chopped green onion adds color and crunch. You can serve this potato salad warm or cold, and it complements sandwiches and beer.


Ingredients (serves about 4)
  • 2 lbs. gold potatoes - or substitute red or white small potatoes
  • 2 whole green onions chopped
  • 3 tbsp. dijon mustard
  • 3 tbsp. cider vinegar
  • 3 tbsp. olive oil
  • 2 tbsp. sugar or substitute (taste for sweetness)
  • 1 tbsp. dried dill (2 tbsp. if fresh chopped)
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 5 oz.of cooked jack mackerel from can or pouch - ok to substitute any tinned fish in water


Directions

Chop potatoes into about 1 inch pieces with or without skin on. Add to low boiling water for about 10-15 minutes. Done when easily pierced with a fork. Drain and set aside while preparing dressing. Whisk together mustard, oil, sugar, and vinegar. Mix together potatoes, dressing, and dill and season with salt and pepper. Finally, drain and lightly mix in fish, trying to keep fish as larger flakes. Serve warm or chilled.
 



By the way, many California parks will be fee free for a couple of weekends this summer:
July 18-19, 2009
August 15-16, 2009
Click here for info -- Will Rogers State Historical Park is not on the list :(
Thanks for the heads up Bargain Babe.


Click here to embed or view video on youtube.
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