Monday, November 28

Tuna and Fennel for Thanksgiving!

As pictured in EMP
Colin and I spent Thanksgiving in Michigan with his family, and we lugged all of our equipment with us to make the Tuna and Fennel hor d'oeurve for Thanksgiving. We packed our sous vide immersion circulator, vacuum, and 10 giant bulbs of fennel, and we planned to get fresh sashimi in Michigan after our Amazon.com sources told us that they couldn't ship until after the holiday weekend.

We ended up waiting until Black Friday to start our inaugural recipe, since the place where we wanted to get our tuna from, Nobel Fish Market, wasn't open on Thanksgiving. I started making the Lemon Oil while Colin called Nobel to make sure that they had received their 12pm fish shipment from their suppliers. We ended up with the freshest sashimi, and Colin decided to get some hamachi (yellowtail) as well to spice up the recipe. Overall, this took us about 4 hours of active cooking from start to finish.


Tuna and Fennel

Zest lemons.

   Heat canola oil with lemon zest

 Simmer lemon oil for a few hours, then chill and strain.
 Meanwhile, prepare fennel bulbs.
 I found that halving the bulbs made it easier to remove the petals while keeping them intact.
 Using a biscuit cutter, Colin cut over a hundred fennel "coins", hoping that we would be able to to find 64 good ones in the end.
 Pernod and white wine reduction for fennel.
 Preparing fennel and reduction for sous vide machine.
 Voila the immersion circulator!
 Fresh sashimi....yummm :)
 Tuna and yellowtail coins

 Assembling fennel, fish, and garnishes.

Tasting notes: this recipe turned out beautifully, even though we couldn't find the fennel pollen for garnish. We thought that the fennel coins varied a little too much in terms of thickness, which may have resulted in unevenly cooked fennel coins. Some of the thicker, crunchier fennel coins overwhelmed the delicate sashimi, and we think that using the thinnest fennel coins, or cooking them for a little bit longer in the immersion circulator, would have resulted in more consistent and delicious sandwiches. Overall, we're very happy at our first attempt at this cookbook!

2 comments:

  1. Awesome job you guys! That immersion circulator looks really cool. I've never seen anything like that before. How did the fennel end up tasting? Is it similar to steaming, or was it completely different? Your tuna and fennel looks absolutely delicious!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think the immersion circulator worked by "boiling" the fennel in a very small amount of liquid (about 1/2 cup), so it really got the flavors in there! It was also partly due to the vacuuming mechanism, because that accelerates flavor infusion even more.

    I think alternatively, I could have just simmered the fennel in a saucepan, but I would have had to make A LOT more sauce.

    When cooking meats, I heard that the circulator can make the meat sooooo tender and evenly cooked, so I'm really looking forward to trying that!

    ReplyDelete