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906 Schellengers Landing Road Commercial fishing boats pull right up to the dock to drop off plump day-boat scallops (as well as many other just-caught critters) for The Lobster House, which is open year-round. Littleneck clams that are just hours out of the water are available at Randall’s Seafood in Pleasantville.1101 S. 9th Street Anastasi Seafood built a rep on an impressive fresh crab selection, but also have many wild whole fish and fillets. Bonus: Signs always indicate where the fish is from. A distributor with local retail stores and a promise to never freeze its fish. Go for the striped bass fillet or other fresh fish and shellfish.3400 S. Lawrence Street Samuels and Son is where the best restaurants get their swimmers, like this whole branzino. They also sell directly to the public from their high-tech building. Hard-to-find cuts like this salmon belly, which is great for sushi. This local company provides sustainable seafood (like this black cod) through its buying club, which has many pickup spots around the region.

Assi Plaza has a large selection of fresh seafood, including sashimi-grade shrimp, live lobsters, and some not-so-common varieties of fresh fish.We eat sashimi at home all the time. I discovered in talking to some friends that this is unusual, even among sashimi fans. People pay a fortune for a few slices of fish in a restaurant or sushi shop when you can spend about $25 for more fish than two people can eat. Sashimi with a bowl of rice is one of the easiest and most delicious meals you can make. Here's a quick pictorial explanation. Here's the fish we bought: $34.82 worth. It's too much for two people for one dinner; we got two meals out of this. We probably should have left one of these at the store, but I knew I was going to take these photos and my wife said, what the hell, consider what we spend when we go out to dinner. We bought all of this fish at Nijiya Market in San Francisco. It's much easier to make a sashimi dinner when you have a local Japanese market, because as you can see, the fish is already scaled and trimmed, ready for the finishing touch.

If you don't have access to such a market, ask your best local fish monger if they'll do that for you. If they won't, click here. Hirame is expensive: $40 a pound! But this was delicious, and it's not a huge piece. I will pay much more for fresh fish than previously frozen. Hirame is very delicate; don't overdo the soy sauce. When it's good, albacore -- the type of tuna that you usually eat from a can -- is one of my favorites. And not only that, it's cheaper than the more popular red-flesh tuna. This was outstanding, the best of all the fish in this meal. Tuna is the mainstay of most sashimi plates. It's pretty, has a firm texture, and you can smother it with other flavorings and it holds up well. I like toro (fatty tuna) but even at the supermarket it's really expensive, and this day they didn't have it fresh. Lesson #1: You have to buy what they have that looks good, not what you want. Here I broke rule #1. I love aji, and it's the only hikari-mono (shiny fish) Nijiya had on this day.

But look at the edges of the fish at the top left: it's dry, not moist and beautiful like the other fish we bought. I knew better, but it was only $3.77 so we bought it anyway. It wasn't terrible, but it wasn't a great representation of aji. Rule #2: Suspect any sashimi on sale. I broke this rule here; that's an "on sale" sticker in the upper left, and look how cheap it is. Because katsuo is always slightly roasted to kill parasites that live in the skin, I thought it might not matter that it was previously frozen, and who knows, maybe they just got a huge shipment of katsuo and needed to move it.
dziewczyna z sushi 2012This katsuo was relatively flavorless;
buy japanese maple newcastlewe ended up marinating it in garlic ponzu, which will make practically any animal flesh taste good.
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Next: slice it all up. You need a very sharp knife for sashimi. We use a Shun, and we don't use it for anything else so that the edge stays sharp. Assuming you're not ready to go out and buy a new knife, use the sharpest one you have. Note how she holds the fish with her left hand, with her fingers against the knife. This is what our $34.82 worth of fish became: more sashimi than we can eat. The plastic container on the bottom right holds the fish we're saving for tomorrow -- although we didn't finish all of the sliced fish.
yo sushi delivery oxford Wrap any uneaten sashimi in plastic and refrigerate it.
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But we either eat it all the next day, or freeze or cook it two days later.Good soy sauce, of course. We store it in the refrigerator. If you don't remember when you bought the open bottle in your closet, buy a new one. Ponzu has a stronger flavor and is a classic with katsuo tataki, but overwhelming for hirame or albacore. We also have tubes of wasabi (fresh is much better but not always available), ginger and garlic. My wife served the aji with a little ginger on top and the katsuo with garlic. Eat the garlic after everything else, and especially after the delicate white fish. I've never understood why people start a sushi meal with spicy tuna roll, but to each his own. Unshown is the rice we will have with this meal. Nothing special there: just rice. We prefer white rice to brown with sashimi because we don't want anything to overpower the fish. You can drink white wine with sashimi -- unoaked, crisp and clean is best. There's a reason so many US sushi bars have Oregon Pinot Gris as a wine choice.