Review:
Canned fish and seafood are convenient, retain nutritional value well, and can be economical to use. 200 Best Canned Fish and Seafood Recipes helps you create conventional and new recipes. These recipes incorporate tuna, crab, salmon, mackerel, cod, sardines, sprats, kippers, anchovies, roe, shrimp, clams, oysters, mussels, squid, and octopus. The author, Susan Sampson, notes that canned seafood and fish should be treated in a different manner than fresh fish because of its distinct flavors and textures.
200 Best Canned Fish and Seafood Recipes has two very informative sections near the front titled “A World of Canned Seafood” and “A Brief History of Canned Seafood”. The information provided is invaluable and unique. Along with explaining what to look for when buying canned fish, there are many interesting tips and facts. One fact: Roe (caviar) was so abundant in the early 19th century in the U.S. that saloons served it just to make their customers thirstier. That’s wild!
The recipes included start off with “The Top 15 Classics”. This includes Old-Fashioned Tuna Noodle Casserole, Vintage Tuna Salad, Hot Crab Dip, and others. There are not a whole lot of pictures included in this cookbook, but it is set up in such a nice and easy fashion. The recipes are also labeled as being “kid-friendly”, “fast”, “guest-worthy”, “healthy”, and “brown-bag” to help with meal planning. Then the book concludes with a chart including fish and seafood substitute options for the main ingredients used in this cookbook.
With my family, we usually keep canned tuna and salmon in our pantry that I regularly incorporate into our meals and we sometimes have canned crab. We live far from sea and ocean so canned varieties can be a great alternative while living in the upper Midwest.
Here are a few seafood dishes to try at home: