Posts Tagged ‘Southern Cooking’

Chef’s Corner: MOMA salad

Monday, October 31st, 2011

Special to The Pensacola News Journal

MOMA salad by Jim Shirley of The Fish House. / Bruce Graner/bgraner@pnj.com

MOMA salad by Jim Shirley of The Fish House. / Bruce Graner/bgraner@pnj.com

Written by Chef Jim Shirley

Funny how things get their names. You’re flipping through a menu and find a name that makes you pause and wonder how that happened. An example would be one of my favorite salads, the MOMA. Here’s how that came about.

A few years back — in the late ’90s — I had a spot called Stella’s Bistro in the Pensacola Cultural Center. It was a casual little place where all the sandwiches were named for theaters and all the salads were named for museums. This little jewel of a salad, made with applewood-smoked bacon, Gorgonzola cheese, toasted walnuts, caramelized pears and a Gorgonzola vinaigrette, was named the MOMA after the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan. The salad came with me to The Fish House and has resisted efforts to be renamed. We’d rather have you come to us, but if you’re cooking at home, here’s the recipe.

MOMA salad

8 slices applewood-smoked bacon

2 cups Gorgonzola (divided)

4 hearts of romaine lettuce

2 Bosc pears, cored, peeled and quartered

1 tablespoon butter

2 tablespoons brown sugar

3 ounces white balsamic vinegar

1/2 cup walnuts

1 tablespoon minced garlic

1/2 teaspoon onion powder

2 teaspoons dried parsley

1 cup olive oil

2 teaspoons Fish House hot sauce

1 pinch white pepper

1 pinch sea salt

First pop a bottle of Ponga sauvignon blanc, a crisp adult beverage from New Zealand winemaker Alan Scott. This will help you get into a salad-making mode. I follow Hemingway’s lead and drink my sauvignon blanc (his was Sancerre) crackling cold.

Now throw a skillet on the stovetop, crank to medium heat, line up the 8 strips of bacon across the pan, and cook fully. Chop and reserve. Strain off the bacon drippings, and wipe the skillet clean. Put the drippings back in the pan, and add butter and brown sugar. Sauté over medium heat for a minute. Toss in the sliced pears, and cook till lightly browned (about four minutes). Remove from pan and chill.

For the dressing, whisk together 1 cup Gorgonzola, minced garlic, onion powder, white pepper, hot sauce, dried parsley and white balsamic vinegar. When well mixed, slowly whisk in the olive oil. Reserve.

Toast walnuts in a pan for a minute or two, and hit with a pinch of sea salt.

To build the salad, first sip on the wine to calm yourself for the arduous task ahead. Toss lettuce in a bowl with 6 ounces of the dressing. Split into four plates, and cap each with 2 slices of bacon and remaining Gorgonzola (split four ways). Lay the caramelized pears over the top, and sprinkle with walnuts to finish. Pour up the grape and fall to.

The Fish House, 600 S. Barracks St., 470-0003, or visitwww.goodgrits.com.

A perfect drink often needs a fresh start

Thursday, August 25th, 2011
herbal lemonade

The Greenhorn, by Melissa Temsook-Boeker - Photo by Tony Giberson/tgiberson@pnj.com

By Melissa Temsook-Boeker special to The Pensacola News Journal

The service industry is, by nature, ever-changing — from trends to menus to locations and so on. So, it follows that those of us in the service industry grow and change with it. As a bartender, sometimes you hit your stride, find a place where you feel comfortable, and get so used to the bar where you work that you could probably mix drinks blind-folded if you had to; you might even stay there for years before, inevitably, it’s time for a change.

This past month, it was that time for my change. I left a job after two years and started training at Atlas Oyster Bar. No matter how much experience you have, it’s always humbling to be the new girl again, having to ask where everything is, learning a new menu, getting lost a couple of times — and, inevitably, as soon as someone is standing behind you, forgetting how to work the computer. But I really do believe that change is good, and I like to think of this newest change as a fresh start. So, this month I am combining fresh ingredients to create a green drink for my days as the greenhorn.

Greenhorn

1 ounce Stoli Strasberi (or Blueberi) Vodka

½ ounce cucumber vodka

½ ounce ginger liqueur

4-5 ounces herbal lemonade (recipe follows)

Combine all ingredients and pour over ice. Garnish with a sprig of mint.

Herbal Lemonade (2 quarts)

6 ounces basil 6 ounces mint 2 ounces sage 2 quarts lemonade of your choice

Wash herbs and leave whole. Combine with lemonade in a large sauce pot and bring just to a boil. Remove from heat and chill overnight. The longer it steeps, the better it will be. Once the mixture gets good and green, strain and serve.

Atlas Oyster House, 600 S. Barracks St., Pensacola. 437-1961, or visit atlas.goodgrits.com.

Fish House’s “Chill” Avocado Soup

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

Recipe by Chef Jim Shirley – Special to Bella

Avocado and crab chilled soup takes the edge off the summer heat.  Photo by Shelley Yates

Avocado and crab chilled soup takes the edge off the summer heat. Photo by Shelley Yates

As the weather heats up, we like to cool down. So the Fish House overlooking Pensacola Bay rolls into “chill” season. Refreshing light broth-based soups and chilled vegetable soups are perfect for lunch this time of year. This refreshing chilled soup is a great make-ahead party food for warm summer nights.

1 quart chicken stock
2 elephant garlic cloves minced
3 tablespoons minced Vidalia onion
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1 Poblano pepper roasted, peeled and seeded
1 Serrano pepper roasted peeled and seeded
3 avocados peeled and seeded
2 cups regular whipping cream
½ cup yogurt (more…)

“Chef’s Corner” West Indies Crab Martini

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Written by Chef Jim Shirley – Special to the News Journal

 West Indies Crab “Martini” by Chef Jim Shirley

West Indies Crab “Martini” by Chef Jim Shirley

In this meltdown weather, it’s always a good thing to serve cold appetizers. This one — a take on our favorite West Indies salad — never gets turned down. I make the marinade separately, and give it enough time to take the edge off the onions, which keeps the crab flavors in the front. A well–iced bottle of Marquis de Gelida (a great version of cava, Spain’s answer to champagne) will pair up well with this little jewel.

1 pound fresh jumbo lump blue crab meat

1 medium white onion, finely minced

2 ripe avocados in thin slices

3 tablespoons key lime juice

4 ounces olive oil

2 tablespoons cane sugar (more…)

Kiss and Tell report.

Monday, June 13th, 2011

Pensacola Celebrity Chefs

Pensacola Celebrity Chefs

Since we last reported, our house has been filled with merriment. We have had many wonderful events on the deck, most notably the welcome-home party of the University of West Florida’s baseball team, where they celebrated their NCAA Division II College World Series victory. And we have become home to the Pensacola Bama Club and their happy-hour meet-ups, which will take place the third Thursday of every month on The Deck Bar. If you are an Alabama fan, come on by and join in the fun. Membership to the club is very affordable and they have lots of fun events. If you don’t like Alabama — well, sorry — start your own team’s happy hour at our house. There are seven days in a week and three bars to choose from. We’d love to have you! Call Shelley Yates for more information: (850) 748-9001.


Our bartender Samantha was selected as a finalist in GoPensacola’s Sexy Server Contest. The results will be posted on GoPensacola.com. Be sure to tell Samantha that you voted for her. Even if you didn’t, she loves to hear that.

Trina’s World Famous Strawberry Cake

Thursday, June 9th, 2011

By Trina Confusione special to the Pensacola News Journal

Strawberry Cake by Trina Confusione of The Fish House. / Katie King/kking@pnj.com

Strawberry Cake by Trina Confusione of The Fish House. / Katie King/kking@pnj.com

For this article, I thought I would do a recipe that I am currently preparing at The Fish House and Atlas Oyster House. I have had a lot of requests from people wanting to buy a whole cake, so I thought I could share this simple recipe with you. It is my husband’s favorite. He has never cared for chocolate cake, so I put this together for him one birthday, and it has been a huge hit ever since.

It is really easy to make this cake any size you want; just be sure the pans you use are grease-free, because the cake has to cling to the side of the pans in order to rise. This cake has to be kept refrigerated, but it travels well on ice in a cooler — perfect for picnics.

(more…)

Strawberry cobia salad recipe – From our Good Grits cookbook

Friday, May 13th, 2011

Written by Chef Jim Shirley

Strawberry Cobia Salad from the Good Grits cookbook

Strawberry Cobia Salad from the Good Grits cookbook

While making one of my many pilgrimages to the Sweet Home Farm cheese shop in Elberta, Ala., I finally stopped at the giant strawberry that I use as a landmark.

Turns out the big strawberry is a true sign of what was growing at B.J. Farms — giant strawberries, sweet and delicious. It occurred to me to use them in a salad with Sweet Home Farm blue cheese and the excellent cobia that were running off the beach.

The great thing about this dish is that most of the major ingredients are fresh and local — except the bacon, of course, which, as everyone knows, comes from hog heaven. (more…)