Tag: Tuna

Just salmon, just tuna: the raw fish becomes ethical – Italian Cuisine

Just salmon, just tuna: the raw fish becomes ethical


No more imported or endangered fish: the raw fish becomes ethical thanks to the counter-current manifesto of Eataly. A project, and a menu, which teaches us to discover new varieties (delicious and ecologically sustainable)

Salmon, sea bass, cod and tuna: four fish, those that dominate global fishing and our consumption. We are used to always eating the same varieties of fish, and if we talk about raw the situation is even more dramatic. It is fashionable, it can be found everywhere and it is struggling with conservation and freshness, but deliberately uncomfortable topics such as the ethical and ecological choices that a carpaccio carries with it are omitted. Only in the Mediterranean would the species be more than 600, but we end up consuming only four, and two of importing from distant seas [*]. Most restaurants do it, in Italy and abroad, but not all.
Eataly took a counter-current position on raw fish consumption and did so with a concrete and courageous project. Is called Raw fish according to Eataly, a manifesto for the respect of the sea and for the spread of a culture that is aware of a fashion that is really too little known. Enrico Panero, Corporate Executive Chef of Eataly explains, who conceived and coordinated the project: “We decided to take a clear position on the raw by defining precise rules, some of which have always been cornerstones of the Eataly Fishmongers and in agreement with Slow Food, and some innovative "- that it is not wrong to define revolutionaries.

Never tasted the leccia?


At Eataly they said enough to fish like salmon, the most common in restaurants but not part of our tradition, and also to red tuna, yellow fin tuna and swordfish. They are the most loved and large-sized fish, so they are easy to work and sell, but they are also animals at the top of the food chain, which take years to become adults and are more at risk of accumulating pollutants. "Instead we have chosen to offer only small seasonal species of fish, molluscs, shells and crustaceans of the Mediterranean Sea, fished sustainably by small fishermen and in the right phase of their life cycle. We only sell fish with a short life cycle that concentrate few polluting meats and do not risk extinction ". Excellent fish, part of our tradition for centuries and unfortunately until now forgotten in the name of fashions and the market.
Never tasted bonito or leccia? At Eataly you can also find these fish and no standardized proposal, the same every day of the year and in every store, but a menu of seasonal raw, local and that is really based on the catch of the day. The project started from the restaurants of Eataly Rome, Milan Smeraldo, Turin Lingotto and Genoa and today it is a concept that is also exported abroad to all Eataly stores where there is a fishmonger.

Seasonal, short and choice marinades

"In concrete terms, our offer focuses on simplicity, to enhance the taste of fish and not mask it. Our seasonal marinades, based on products from the Eataly market, are made at the time of order to not cook the fish, leaving the fiber and flavor of the meat intact ". You can choose at the time and decide whether to try them on fish, crustaceans, molluscs or shells. "Each marinade plays on the contrast between fat and acid, then extra virgin olive oil, vinegar or citrus fruit", continues Enrico Panero. And creativity is not lacking: oil and lemon, the classic marinade, is available in all seasons, but you can try, and even copy at home, recipes such as Octopus Crudo, oil, lemon, fresh tomato and chili pepper; Leccia stella with oil, fresh orange juice and fennel; Raw squid or cuttlefish tagliatelle, oil, fresh tomato, red vinegar and capers; Bonito, oil, lemon and fresh celery tartare.

At home, only fished fish

Eataly's raw fish is processed in full compliance with the raw material and hygienic protection. Except for the crustaceans, as required by law, all the fish for raw consumption is chilled at low temperatures in a professional manner, very fast and without ruining the muscle fiber of the meat. There is no “thawed fish” effect that is obtained after freezing in the domestic freezer, and therefore to get a carpaccio at home, it is good to go to the fish counter: there are fish already slaughtered, to buy and consume immediately, but just ask and the raw fish can also be ordered in advance, and pick up the chosen day, choosing from all the varieties on the fish counter.

[*] Why say enough to the four fish



They call themselves "Four Fish" because there are four fish that dominate the international fish market. To find out more, we recommend reading the book by journalist Paul Greenberg, Four Fish – The Future of the Last Wild Food, Slow Food publisher, which became a The New York Times bestseller and winner of the James Beard Award for Writing. An engaging book that investigates the history of great fishing, intensive farming, consumer tastes and the economy behind frozen sticks or sushi. And that makes us understand the importance of our daily choices, the only ones that can really change the world.

Tuna and potato meatballs recipe – Italian Cuisine

Tuna and potato meatballs recipe


  • 340 g tuna in drained oil
  • 300 g small potatoes
  • 120 g peanut oil
  • 40 g breadcrumbs
  • 10 g capers in salt
  • an egg
  • thyme
  • lemon
  • mustard
  • extra virgin olive oil
  • salt
  • pepper

For the recipe of the tuna and potato balls, cook the whole potatoes with the skin in plenty of water for about 30 minutes, then peel and mash with a potato masher. Desalinate and chop the capers; also mince the leaves of 2 thyme-tipped almonds. Mix the mashed potatoes with the finely chopped tuna, capers and thyme, adjusting with salt and pepper. Form small patties (you will get about 18). Bread them with the breadcrumbs and brown them in a pan in 4 tablespoons of olive oil, seasoned with a couple of thyme sprigs, for a minute on each side. Drain on kitchen paper.
For mayonnaise: Blend the egg with a hand-held blender with a teaspoon of mustard, a tablespoon of lemon juice and a pinch of salt, pouring the peanut oil flush. Add the leaves of a sprig of thyme and a grated lemon peel. Serve the meatballs with mayonnaise or with the hot sauce of fried pasta.

Tuna del Chianti: the recipe that does good – Italian Cuisine

168579


The Christmas season has officially begun. We suggest a triplet of presents: go to eat in one of the "Restaurants against the Hunger", those that on the menu until December 31 have at least one support dish, which means that 2 euros for each dish ordered go to support a child undernourished. In this way you will give to others and also to yourselves. And then try the "Chianti's tuna" in the restaurant La Cucina de Mibabbo Milan, an exquisite recipe in which you can even try your hand at home and give this particular preserve to friends and relatives for Christmas.

It's about a Tuscan historical recipe that was used for the preservation of meat, from origins farmers of ancient poor cooking, and is recognized for its goodness and its way of preparation unchanged over the centuries. "The idea starts from the need to preserve the pork for as long as possible, which was slaughtered in the cold months. Originally they used less valuable meats, hence the logic that the pig does not throw anything, today we use shoulder or pork leg. We use the pork leg – explains Davide Balduini, of the La Cucina de Mibabbo restaurant – It was the preparation it made grandmother, who came to Milan after the war. My grandfather in '52 began to open a wine bar, then a lorry for truck drivers and in the '70s mine dad and his sister they opened a Tuscan restaurant in Milan ". Son of art, then … But David had 'rebelled' to his' destiny 'of restaurateur: "I did not want to do it." As a boy I saw my father and I said to myself:'I will never do the restaurateur! ". Too much, too demanding … ". But, you know, the blood is not commanded … and so Davide still succeeds in the world of food and works for many years in a form of contemporary mixing – if you can say so – that is in the catering. Then 4 years ago, the surrender: Davide opens his restaurant. Tuscan. In Milan. "It is clear that in the end the unconscious pushed me and I must say that it gives me great satisfaction". It seems that the unconscious has also prompted David to reproduce the situation of his father (certainly the name of the restaurant is not accidental!) With his sister, since talking about the Chef, Roberta Magnani, declares: "Let's work together like my sister"! Davide's father sent her the kitchen of the Tuscan tradition: "Genuine as our somewhat rough language, tasty as a joke funny frank and simple as the way we do. Tuscan cuisine resembles its people, recipes handed down from father to son, even from father to son "- as David states on the website.

Made of dishes such as ribollita, crostini with chicken livers and tuna from Chianti, naturally. "We propose the 'tuna of Chianti' as our dish among the starters, it is very requested because it's one particular preparation, made of many passages each of which leaves its trace of flavor ". And so this year the tuna of the Chianti of Davide and his father go to nurture also the joint initiative of Action against Hunger (every year they also privately do a 'solidarity initiative to help someone).

Here is the recipe.

THE TUNA OF CHIANTI

168579INGREDIENTS

1.5 kg of pork leg

3 juniper berries

5 grains of black pepper

2 lt white wine

3 bay leaves

Virgin olive oil

Coarse salt

Thoroughly clean the meat from fat, tendons and rind.

Put it in a large container sprinkled with 3 big salt punches and keep it in the refrigerator for 3 or 4 days.

After this time clean the meat well from the salt and cook for 5 hours immersed in white wine with the addition of aromas, over low heat.

Leave to cool in the wine, break it with your hands and lay it in sterilized glass jars with bay leaves, pepper, juniper, cover with extra virgin olive oil.

Store the tuna in the refrigerator, checking the oil level, consume it after a month or so with cannellini beans, Certaldo onion (Slow Food presidium) or a purple potato pie with a drizzle of oil and fresh pepper.

To try!

To know all the restaurants that are participating in this Action against Hunger campaign (there are hundreds in all of Italy!) Click here.

Carra Traverso Saibante
December
2018

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