Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Baked Fish Sticks with Avocado Lemon Ginger Dip
I must confess to one of my "quirks." I do not wear jeans. I am not trying to cultivate an eccentricity. I just absolutely do not find them comfortable. That stiff denim fabric. That waist band that rubs against the skin. I hate it with the entirety of my heart. They have been phased out of my life completely.
My aversion to jeans started at an early age. I'm pretty sure my mom capitalized on this fact, and would make me wear jeans as punishment when I was little. I say "pretty sure" because I sometimes lose track of what is reality and what are the personal myths and lies we tell ourselves (luckily, this beloved parent of mine is coming for a visit, so I can find out for sure - I'm extremely excited about this). But I do remember that the thought of wearing jeans was an effective deterrent against wrongdoing.
Eventually, I gave in to lure of conformity, wearing denim like all the normal people. But I never loved them, and relished the thought of returning to a state of pajamahood at the end of each and every day.
One day, it occurred to me that I did not need to continue my denim distress. Alternatives exist. And thus I left behind my jail of jeans.
So instead of being fashionable, I choose comfort. Which generally leaves me with two choices. Dresses, with or without leggings. And yoga/sweat pants and tees. Which, depending on my mood, leaves me under or over dressed for just about every occasion. And I am okay with this.
Sometimes, however, comfortable clothes just don't give the proper amount of comfort. And that is where food comes in. A few days ago, my friend Jess informed that you can cut fish into stick shapes. And then turn those into fish sticks. This was the most genius of all the ideas. How did I not think of that before? So I went ahead and made one of those most basics of comfort foods - fish sticks. And a wonderfully zesty avocado lemon ginger dip to go along with it. Comfort food that goes supremely well with anything you choose to wear.
Ingredients
For the fish sticks:
3/4 pound white fish (I used rockfish), cut into strips or nuggets (whatever shape strikes your fancy!)
1 egg, beaten
1/4 cup flour
1 cup panko
3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper
1 1/4 teaspoons dried dill weed
For the avocado lemon ginger dip:
1 tablespoon grated ginger (use a microplane)
flesh from 1 small avocado
1/4 cup Greek yogurt
1/2 teaspoon lemon zest
1 teaspoon lemon juice
2 chopped scallions
1 tablespoon chives
pinch Saigon cinnamon
Instructions
To make the fish sticks: Heat oven to 375.
Place egg in a shallow bowl. In another shallow bowl, mix together flour, panko, salt, freshly ground black pepper, and dill.
Take each strip or nugget and dredge in the beaten egg and then the panko mixture. Place on baking sheet. Repeat until all the fish has been dredged in both the egg and the panko mixture. Bake for about 15 minutes, until golden brown on the outside and cooked through.
To make the dip: Place ginger, avocado, Greek yogurt, and lemon zest/juice in bowl. Use a fork to mash together. Add scallions, chives, and pinch of cinnamon and continue to blend together. Serve with fish sticks.
My Berlin Kitchen Review & Giveaway
If you are a fan of The Wednesday Chef blog, there's no question, you will enjoy My Berlin Kitchen: Adventures in Love and Life by Luisa Weiss now out in paperback. The book is a memoir with recipes and Weiss traces her journey through her memories of food in vivid detail. The style of writing, like Weiss herself is a bit of a mishmash. Her parents are Italian and American but she was born and partially raised in Germany. She is very precise when it comes to recipe writing yet there are splashes of sensuality and emotion in her prose as well.
Weiss is a good writer and a master of detail. Her experiences and recollections of her time in Germany, the US, France and Italy are often snapshots of times and places and really have the ability to transport you. The book follows a romantic storyline, with some funny bits interspersed with plenty of angst, and it's generally pleasurable to read, although she's clearly not a happy-go-lucky live-for-the-day type.
Memoirs require a certain level of introspection and self involvement and as a result the subject can come across as self-absorbed at times, especially when written by someone who is fairly young. Ultimately I didn't find Weiss as endearing as I would have hoped. Frankly I had the same issues with the Julie/Julia Project. I also found some gaps and unanswered questions perplexing--why did she live with her father in the US instead of her mother? Why did she accept the job in San Francisco when nothing about living in San Francisco appealed to her? Once she moved to Berlin did her career end in favor of writing her memoir and nothing more? That said, I enjoyed the book, particularly the German comfort food recipes (Gooseberry cream cake, Alsatian flatbread with bacon and creme fraiche, spiced plum butter and spiced cookies) and I do recommend it.
Viking is giving away one copy of this book to a Cooking with Amy reader, US resident only. Leave a comment telling me about your favorite recipe from The Wednesday Chef blog or the German recipe you'd most like to learn to cook. I'll choose a winner at random on September 5th. You must include your email address in the appropriate field so I can contact you. It will only be visible to me.
Disclaimer: I received this book as a review copy. I was not paid to write this or any other post on Cooking with Amy.
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