Fun with sushi

My two eldest LOVE sushi but I haven’t convinced my youngest yet to give it a real try  even though he will eat wasabi rice crackers and anything with seaweed/nori.  Trader Joe’s has some dried Nori chips that are pretty yummy but don’t come close to their discontinued Tempura Nori & Wasabi chips.  We used to make them into an appetizer with sushi-grade tuna and wasabi mayo; yum.  

The other night we made homemade sushi with our new sushi mat.  We set up a sushi bar on our kitchen island.  Tuna, rice, nori, avocado, cucumber, carrots, wasabi tobiko, pickled ginger, scallions, wasabi and tamari soy sauce made up our ingredient list.  The sushi rice was prepared according to instructions with rice wine vinegar, sugar and salt.   (For 1 cup rice: 1/4 vinegar, 1 Tbsp sugar, 1 tsp salt.)  The vegetables were mostly julienne except the avocado.  Though, next time it should be thinner for ease of rolling. 

We made several different rolls with various ingredients depending on kids’ preferences.  They each had their own soy sauce with or without wasabi mixed in.  My youngest had a bowl of rice, nori sheets, cucumber and carrots.  At least he got a nutritious dinner and with all the protein we eat, he didn’t miss out.

It was a great, fun dinner to make together.  We still have to practice getting the rolls tight enough, but the kids don’t care.

Since I’ve been telling fish stories… read this

Link

Since I’ve been telling fish stories… read this

Fishy, Fishy, Fishy, Fish

Choosing fish these days creates all sorts of decision making stress.  The dilemma surrounds what not to buy—some fish might have mercury or PCB contamination and others are over-fished.  So what to buy? There are lists online to help.   Here are two:  one here and the other here. 

 

The other day my husband bought swordfish, a fish I never buy myself; I tend to stay away from large fish because of mercury.  Tuna we eat more often than swordfish but still not as much as we used to now that we have children.  I like tunafish salad sandwiches and adore sushi, but don’t have either more than once monthly. (Canned tuna has higher levels of mercury, so beware.)  We probably eat swordfish once or twice a year.  We figure since it’s so seldom that we might as well enjoy it when we do- and will only buy it when it looks so very good.

 

We grilled the swordfish and we served it with a choice of sauces: puttanesca and a lemon caper sauce; Forbidden Black rice; CSA rainbow chard; micro bok choy (really small bok choy); and CSA garlic scapes. 

Start rice first.  Forbidden Black Rice name comes from long ago when it was forbidden for anyone but the Emperor to eat.  It becomes a deep dark purple when cooked and is a whole grain rice that is supposedly high in iron.  We love the taste, and the boys love the color too. 

 Steam chard and bok choy and shock to stop cooking.  Leave to side to finish later.  Steam or blanch garlic scapes and finish on the grill.   

My two eldest kids love capers and will pick them out of sauces to eat first. For the lemon caper sauce just a squeeze half a lemon over 3 Tbsp of capers and two pats of butter.  I put it in the microwave for 40 seconds, stirred and served!  So easy and quick.  You can also do it on the stove.  Just want to melt butter and warm capers. 

 

Puttanesca sauce is really quick to make too.  Just a little more chopping.

  •  1 shallot or 1/4 white onion finely diced
  •  1 large garlic clove chopped
  • 1 plum tomato, seeded
  • 3 anchovies or 1 Tbsp anchovy paste
  • Handful of green or black olives, pitted and chopped.
  • 2-3 Tbsp capers
  • Black pepper to tasteHeat over stove until tomatoes have disintegrated.

Not every child will like puttanesca, but seeing that most kids like salty foods, some might surprise you!  We serve the sauces on the side so our kids can control how much they would like of them and where they want it placed!

To prepare the swordfish put olive oil, salt and pepper on a plate, place one side in oil then turn until both sides are nicely coated.  Place on hot grill and cook about 3 minutes on each side. (The cooking times vary depending on your grill and the thickness of the swordfish.)

Reheat the chard with touch of butter, salt and pepper.  Reheat the bok choy with butter or canola oil, sesame oil and soy sauce as I’ve noted before.

 

 

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