Good Fish_ Sustainable Seafood Recipes From the Pacific Coast - Becky Selengut [0]
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Epigraph
Foreword
Introduction
how to use this book
sustainable seafood basics
SHELLFISH
clams
mussels
oysters
dungeness crab
shrimp
scallops
FINFISH
wild salmon
pacific halibut
black cod
rainbow trout
albacore tuna
arctic char
LITTLE FISH & EGGS
sardines
squid
sustainable caviar
appendix a: a note on eating raw seafood
appendix b: fish with the highest levels of mercury and pops
sustainable seafood resources
index
about the author
Copyright Page
to dad
acknowledgments
To my army of recipe testers, tasters, advisors, and friends, I bow deeply upon one knee: Carrie Kincaid, Heather Diller, Heather Weiner, Becky Ginn, Kim Allen, Maxine Williams, Elaine Hackett, Marc Schermerhorn, David Wiley, Lorna Yee, Henry Lo, Derek Slager, Chris Nishiwaki, Larry Liang, Kristen Ramer Liang, Hans Giner, Catherine Moon Giner, Elaine Mowery, Gordon King, Anna Berman, Shannon and Jason Mullett-Bowlsby, Michael Anderson, Shirley Abreu, Jenise Silva, Matthew Amster-Burton, John Tippett, Allison Day, Gregory Heller, Erika Garcia, Judy Niver, “Oyster Bill” Whitlock, everyone at Mutual Fish, Nancy Harvey, Shauna James Ahern, Dan Ahern, Amy Duchene, Sue Skillman, Ryan Breske, Hsiao-Ching Chou, Rebekah Denn, Nancy Leson, Janis Martin, Emily Wines, Jake Kosseff, Doug Derham, Miki Tamura, Mona Memmer, Janis Fulton, Therese Ogle, Mimi Southwood, Ba Culbert and the staff at Tilikum Place Café, Susan Actor, Lisa Fisher, Caro Horsfall, Lara Muffley, Melissa Poe, J. Christian Andrilla, Langdon Cook, Rocky Yeh, and the “Food Whores.” A big sloppy kiss to Denise Anderson, the queen of recipe testers.
Elizabeth Wales—thank you for sharing your expertise with me, above and beyond that of a good neighbor.
Jill Lightner of Edible Seattle, Jackie DeCicco of PCC Cooks, and Giselle Smith of Seattle Homes and Lifestyles—each of you makes me a better writer every time I work with you, and I greatly appreciate how supportive you are of my passion for all things seafood (and an occasional missed deadline or five).
They may not be aware of their membership, but the following people are all on my Seafood Advisory Committee; they are fishermen and renowned experts in their fields who have graciously donated their time to advise me on issues of seafood sustainability. Thank you to Jeremy Brown and Rich Childers for your expert review, and to Nick Furman of the Oregon Dungeness Crab Commission. My eternal appreciation to Casson Trenor for your knowledge, passion, love of sushi, and quick pickup on the phone whenever I needed you; Jon Rowley, for inspiring me with all your love and appreciation for the inherent deliciousness of life; Rick Moonen, for being one of the most colorful advocates for the oceans I’ve ever had the pleasure of meeting—and an incredible chef, to boot; Hajime Sato, for following your heart and taking the huge risk of changing your business in favor of sustainable sushi; Jacqueline Church, for your support and long-standing commitment to sustainable seafood; and Marco Pinchot, for giving so freely of your time and knowledge in guiding our little rat pack on your shellfish-farming tours. Amy Grondin, many thanks for being my go-to fish expert and sustainable seafood compadre for the last four years: you are a generous, knowledge-seeking, fish-lovin’ woman; you are the salt of the ocean and have been hugely helpful in getting my facts right for this book.
Amy Pennington, thank you for introducing me to Susan Roxborough, my editor extraordinaire at Sasquatch Books, who brought this idea to my door, appreciated my voice in all its snark (well, maybe not all), and took a chance on giving me so many pages. Thanks to all the folks at Sasquatch, specifically publisher Gary Luke, Rachelle Longé (production editor goddess!), Diane Sepanski (copy editor goddess!), Anna Goldstein (designer goddess!), and Lisa Gordanier (proofreader goddess!).
Clare Barboza, working with you has been like finding a missing limb that looks remarkably like a