superfood - the foodie website

Welcome to Richard Leader's food and cooking blog
- and welcome to our new look.
This site is about what I cook and eat - that's all there is to it!

Please feel free to email me, leave a comment or join the mailing list.

PermaPost:

A-Z of English Food - feel free to contribute!
Updated: 08/01/08

The Full Kitchen Bookshelf
Updated: 28/12/07

ukfoodbloggers

Where you might find me lurking: Food Blogs

Some of my favourite UK-based food blogs:

And some from further afield:

Latest Book Reviews

Morimoto: The New Art of Japanese Cooking - a review

Morimoto - the new art of japanese cooking reviewed. "Beautiful, sublime, informative but utterly bonkers"

The Full Kitchen Bookshelf

I'm trying to compile my full list of cook books - it's going to take a while I think! Here are some to be getting on with...

The Food of Spain and Portugal - a review

A stunning overview of the 21 regions of Iberia highlighting the different gastronomic variations in each - written with style and a clear love of the landscape, people and food of the area

Nobody Does It Better: A Review

Nobody Does It Better: Why French Home Cooking Is Still The Best In The World - on the evidence of this passionate and entertaining book, French home cooking is still in pretty fine fettle.

Most Popular Tags

                                       

The Foodie Blogroll

Click to Join the Foodie Blogroll

Click here to join

We got a mention in The Guardian - check out their A-Z of unusual ingredients part 2.

Smoked Eel - the ultimate luxury food

posted Tuesday, 27 September 2005
Sadly, eel is one of those foodstuffs that people pull a face at, saying "Oh, eeeeel... I couldn't!". It sits alongside offal in registering disgust from those who haven't tried it. If your one experience of eel is the famous London jellied variety, I say think again.
Jellied eels are too often bony, bland and slimy.

Once smoked, however, eel is a real thing of beauty. It's that luscious combination of oily fish and oak smoke - think of smoked salmon or trout - even mackrel - after the smoker, the fish takes on a texture of silk and fills the mouth with a feeling of luxury.

Smoked eel might seem expensive (I recently bought 100g for £4.95) but you don't need much - 100g should be enough for two reasonably generous portions.
You can get smoked eel from a number of places - my local fishmongers smoke their own (Jarvis Fish, Norbiton) and I've also bought it from Brown & Forrest of Somerset (who have a stall at Borough Market on Saturdays or you can buy from their website).

For my money, smoked eel rates higher than smoked salmon (actually, I'd put a good smoked trout in between the two).

What to do with it:
Last time I had smoked eel, we took the recipe straight out of Alistair Little's Soho Cooking (a great book full of entertaining anecdotes and great recipes). This recipe called for fillets of smoked eel with a salad of bitter curly endive and crispy bacon dressed with a horseradish dressing.
Though the ingredients here are few, they all balance perfectly - the crisp, hot and salty bacon compliments the smooth oiliness of the eel, the bitter endive balances the sweetness of the fish and the horseradish dressing cuts through it all beautifully.

Next up... I'm going to try Fergus Henderson's (St John's Restaurant) smoked eel with crispy bacon and mashed potato - sounds like perfect luxury comfort food to me!

The health bit:
Eel is a very good source of those essential Omega 3 fatty acids - containing around 5grammes per 100grammes. However, it is also rich in vitamin A - making it unsuitable for women in the early stages of pregnancy or trying to conceive.

The interesting nature bit:
While eels can be raised in fish farms, they do not breed there. Instead, eels breed in the deep Sargasso Sea (off Florida) - the larve then float on the currents to European waters. As elvers (young eels up to 7cm - a treat I have not yet tried), they migrate to fresh water to grow and change colour (to yellow).
As mature adults (10 years), they change colour again to 'silver' (actually black with lighter underbodies) and migrate back to the sea to breed again...

The bad news:
So it seems with so many of life's luxuries - eels are becoming rarer. According to Brown & Forrest, 2005 was the worst elver harvest in living memory. Elvers were priced at £400 per kilo - making it too expensive for Brown & Forrest to restock their farmed streams. Bad news indeed.
I don't know why things are so bad - but we could take a guess - global warming maybe? We know the ocean temperature off Florida is high this year - ask the people of New Orleans...

Technorati tags:

tags:      

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit




1. Michelle left...
Wednesday, 28 September 2005 5:15 pm

I am one of those who makes the *yick* face when offered eel. I'm not the most adventurous person, but the eel with bacon and mashed potato sounds like a safe introductory dish.

In some places eels are disappearing, and in others they are appearing where they are not wanted. I believe there are some invading eels in Canada waters. You may be importing your eels from Canada soon!


2. Richard Leader left...
Thursday, 6 October 2005 2:06 pm

Thanks for swinging-by, Michelle. I hope you do try some smoked eel - I think this is a less daunting task than trying fresh eel or (heaven forbid!) jellied eels!

Interesting to hear that they are now invading Canadian waters - my concern is still that they are not spawning in the Saragossa Sea - maybe they are, they're just getting lost in their journey back to Blighty!


Mailing List

Sign-up to receive emails whenever this site is updated with new posts. Your privacy is respected and guaranteed.