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Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Dining at Phil's Fish Market with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget and Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Dining at Phil’s Fish Market with Juilliard Graduate Florence Paget in Moss Landing, California by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget



When my daughter Florence was growing up, my family often went out to Phil’s Fish Market and Restaurant in Moss Landing (across from Elkhorn Slough and into the port area) for our favorite dish there – cioppino.

Cioppino is called a San Francisco stew, sometimes even an invention of the city.  Cioppino is not an invention; it is a Ligurian dish from Genoa, Italy.  Genoa is a port city that used to have a large, merchant fleet and is nicknamed “La Superba.”

Most of the Italians in San Francisco are descendants of immigrants from Genoa, so food from that region is the Italian fare of that city.  (For information on Genoese and Ligurian food, in general, see Flavors of the Riviera by Colman Andrews.  He also writes of what the food of Nice, France is like, which uses many of the same ingredients as Italian cuisine.)

The Italians in Monterey County are mostly of Sicilian descent, so they go out to Phil’s Fish Market and Restaurant to eat Geneose Cioppino fish stew, too.  (A great cookbook about Sicilian food is Pomp and Sustenance: Twenty-Five Centuries of Sicilian Food by Mary Taylor Simeti.)

The cioppino at Phil’s Fish Market and Restaurant is especially good, because they use Dungeness crab from Alaska and the Pacific West Coast to make it in their version instead of mussels that you find in many recipes.  (Parisians call mussels “poor man’s oysters.”)

Sicilians do know how to cook Dungeness crab, so they buy 6 to 12 at a time to make a nice meal for their family.  (As a tip for visitors, Sicilians in Monterey go to the Fish House or Vito’s in Pacific Grove to eat well when not cooking for their families.)

Basically, the ingredients of cioppino that you boil together until the fish fillets are cooked follow (you can tell what something tastes like by looking at ingredients):

-olive oil

-fennel (optional – use a splash of Ricard or Pernod, if you do not have fennel)

-onion

-shallots

-garlic cloves

-red pepper flakes

-tomato paste

-diced tomatoes

-white wine

-fish stock

-clams

-Dungeness crab

-shrimp

-salmon fillets in chunks

There is a very good online history project about cioppino called History of Cioppino – The Kitchen Project.  This site documents where the editors obtained their information and recipes.  Its website address varies, but you can find it with this information.  It appears that Jean Andersen, who wrote The Food of Portugal is the main editor.

Cioppino is great with toasted baguettes, panisse with tahini sauce (chickpea bars with sesame seed sauce.  Chickpeas are full of iron.  I like sparkling water like San Pellegrino, Badoit, or Perrier (for the Roland Garros crowd) with cioppino.

By Ruth Paget - Author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

Click here for:  Ruth Paget's Amazon Books



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