Have you tried fresh sardines (like night & day over
canned...if your fishmonger [ours is in Lake Charles] can get them)
The Mrs. and I like them broiled or grilled (really simple and easy at home).
David Tanis - City Kitchen - NY Times -15 Sept 17
"Consider the sardine. The name alone evokes a crowded subway car (“packed in like sardines”) or Saltine crackers — or, if you’re me, a lip-smacking treat.
The sight of sardines in an opened can, pressed together tightly and cleverly layered, is actually quite beautiful. If you are a fan, a portable lunch of tinned sardines and crackers is a fine thing. Some, however, prefer a canned-sardine sandwich, whether on white bread with mayo and onions, on toasted buttered brown bread or open-faced on rye with lettuce and tomato.
In France, vintage sardines aged in the can are a phenomenon, presented like wine with the year they were preserved. High-end canned sardines are also enjoyed in Spain, whether in olive oil or tomato sauce, or smoked.
Fresh sardines, are delightful, and well worth knowing. For an extra flourish, it’s fun to cook sardines on large fig leaves.
Fresh sardines are delightful, and well worth knowing. Many Sicilian recipes employ them; they can be found as marinated raw fillets, fried or tossed in pasta with wild fennel.
Sardines for the grill, with fennel, fig leaves and parsley.
Grilled fresh sardines are often offered on restaurant menus throughout the Mediterranean, and, increasingly, here in the United States. But it’s very easy, and less expensive, to grill them at home, whether over hot coals or under the broiler.
At the fishmonger, look for firm, shiny, glistening specimens, and ask to have them cleaned and scaled. Then it’s a simple matter of seasoning them with salt and pepper and a lick of olive oil. They take no more than two minutes per side to cook and need only a lemon wedge for accompaniment. But a little thinly sliced fennel, a pile of arugula or a tomato salad would not be unwelcome.
Grilled sardines, served with a shaved fennel salad.
For an extra flourish, it’s fun to cook sardines (any fish, really) on large fig leaves. After cooking the sardines on one side, simply lay the leaves on the grill and place two fish, cooked side up, on top of each leaf to finish cooking. As well as being attractive, the leaves add a subtle fruity perfume when they hit the heat.
Fresh sardines are also touted as a sustainable fish choice, preferable to larger fish that are higher on the food chain, such as tuna and swordfish, which are overfished and have high mercury levels. Currently, sardines from the Pacific are recommended, available year-round, although there are occasional hiatuses in fishing to allow stocks to replenish. Sardines are high in healthy omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins and minerals, too.
Most important, they are extremely delicious".
Works Cited: The World of Sardines
"Hard to call it a party without sardines". Brandon Mull
The Mrs. and I like them broiled or grilled (really simple and easy at home).
David Tanis - City Kitchen - NY Times -15 Sept 17
"Consider the sardine. The name alone evokes a crowded subway car (“packed in like sardines”) or Saltine crackers — or, if you’re me, a lip-smacking treat.
The sight of sardines in an opened can, pressed together tightly and cleverly layered, is actually quite beautiful. If you are a fan, a portable lunch of tinned sardines and crackers is a fine thing. Some, however, prefer a canned-sardine sandwich, whether on white bread with mayo and onions, on toasted buttered brown bread or open-faced on rye with lettuce and tomato.
In France, vintage sardines aged in the can are a phenomenon, presented like wine with the year they were preserved. High-end canned sardines are also enjoyed in Spain, whether in olive oil or tomato sauce, or smoked.
Fresh sardines, are delightful, and well worth knowing. For an extra flourish, it’s fun to cook sardines on large fig leaves.
Fresh sardines are delightful, and well worth knowing. Many Sicilian recipes employ them; they can be found as marinated raw fillets, fried or tossed in pasta with wild fennel.
Sardines for the grill, with fennel, fig leaves and parsley.
Grilled fresh sardines are often offered on restaurant menus throughout the Mediterranean, and, increasingly, here in the United States. But it’s very easy, and less expensive, to grill them at home, whether over hot coals or under the broiler.
At the fishmonger, look for firm, shiny, glistening specimens, and ask to have them cleaned and scaled. Then it’s a simple matter of seasoning them with salt and pepper and a lick of olive oil. They take no more than two minutes per side to cook and need only a lemon wedge for accompaniment. But a little thinly sliced fennel, a pile of arugula or a tomato salad would not be unwelcome.
Grilled sardines, served with a shaved fennel salad.
For an extra flourish, it’s fun to cook sardines (any fish, really) on large fig leaves. After cooking the sardines on one side, simply lay the leaves on the grill and place two fish, cooked side up, on top of each leaf to finish cooking. As well as being attractive, the leaves add a subtle fruity perfume when they hit the heat.
Fresh sardines are also touted as a sustainable fish choice, preferable to larger fish that are higher on the food chain, such as tuna and swordfish, which are overfished and have high mercury levels. Currently, sardines from the Pacific are recommended, available year-round, although there are occasional hiatuses in fishing to allow stocks to replenish. Sardines are high in healthy omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins and minerals, too.
Most important, they are extremely delicious".
Works Cited: The World of Sardines