SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO
Cioppino is a classic San Francisco seafood dish that will make you look like a superstar in the kitchen. The rich red sauce is a perfect compliment to the seafood and although it takes a little while to cook, it's a delicious restaurant-style dish that you can serve in your own home.
Provided by Chef Dennis Littley
Categories Entree
Time 1h25m
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- Heat two tablespoons of olive oil in a deep skillet or ductch oven over medium heat.
- Add the fennel, onion, shallots, and salt. Saute until the onion becomes translucent about 5-7 minutes.
- Add the garlic and crushed red pepper and continue to saute for 2 minutes.
- Add the tomato paste, plum tomatoes and all juices, wine, chicken stock, and bay leaf.
- Bring the sauce to a light boil, then reduce the heat to simmer and allow to cook for one hour, stirring occasionally
- While the sauce is simmering using another saute pan, add 2 tablespoons olive oil and sear the shrimp, scallops (and fish pieces if used) on both sides, making sure not to fully cook them (about half way is fine)
- Remove the seafood from the pan and place it on a plate until needed. If you did use the fish pieces you can add them to the sauce now. *do not add the shrimp or scallops at this time
- In the same pan add a little more oil, the clams and mussels. Cover and steam them until they open. *If any of the mussels or clams are open before cooking discard them, they're dead and aren't safe for consumption.
- At about the 45-minute mark of simmering the sauce, add in the crabs, mussels and clams with all the pan juices. Continue to simmer.
- If you are serving your Choppino over pasta you may begin getting the water ready at this time.
- With five minutes of cooking time remaining, add in the shrimp and scallops.
- Taste the sauce and re-season as needed.
- If you cooked pasta serve over pasta. If not, enjoy this delicious stew with a loaf of crusty bread.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 744 kcal, Carbohydrate 44 g, Protein 59 g, Fat 24 g, SaturatedFat 3 g, Cholesterol 158 mg, Sodium 3213 mg, Fiber 7 g, Sugar 17 g, ServingSize 1 serving
FISHERMAN'S WHARF CIOPPINO
You can serve this true San Francisco dish with garlic bread.
Provided by norm
Categories Soups, Stews and Chili Recipes Soup Recipes Seafood Shrimp Soup
Time 55m
Yield 8
Number Of Ingredients 17
Steps:
- Heat oil in a large saucepan over medium-high heat. Saute onion and bell pepper in hot oil until tender, about 5 minutes; add garlic and continue to saute until garlic is fragrant, about 1 minute. Transfer mixture to a large stockpot.
- Stir tomatoes, chicken broth, white wine, tomato paste, parsley, basil, oregano, red pepper flakes, and black pepper with the onion mixture in the stockpot; bring to a boil, cover the pot, reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer until the tomatoes are softened, about 15 minutes.
- Stir shrimp and cod chunks into the tomato mixture. Arrange clams and mussels in the liquid so they are partially submerged. Cover pot again and continue cooking until the clams and mussels open, 7 to 10 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 290 calories, Carbohydrate 15.2 g, Cholesterol 131.1 mg, Fat 9 g, Fiber 3 g, Protein 29.9 g, SaturatedFat 1.4 g, Sodium 834.7 mg, Sugar 7.6 g
SAN FRANCISCO-STYLE CIOPPINO
Provided by Food Network
Time 3h15m
Yield 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 34
Steps:
- For the tomato base: In a large pot, heat the oil over medium heat and add the carrots, onions, peppers, and celery, and saute until tender, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic, chile, herbs, and seasonings and cook until fragrant. Add the wine, vinegar, Worcestershire, and hot sauce and reduce until the liquid is almost evaporated. Add the tomatoes and all of the fish stock, bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook for 1 to 1 1/2 hours, stirring occasionally. Strain through a fine strainer, discarding the solids.
- For the seafood: Place the strained liquid into a clean pot and bring to a simmer. Add the crab, clams, mussels, and sea bass, cover the pot, and cook for 2 to 3 minutes. Add the prawns and cook an additional 2 to 3 minutes.
- To serve: Divide the seafood into 6 large bowls and ladle the broth over top. Serve with garlic bread.
- In a large pot, add all of the ingredients and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to low and simmer for 45 minutes. Strain, reserving the broth and discarding the solids.
CIOPPINO
The cioppino at Anchor Oyster Bar in San Francisco is a showstopper - a beautiful, long-simmered tomato sauce thinned with clam juice and packed with a mix of excellent seafood. Work with whatever seafood is best where you are, though Dungeness crab in the shell is nonnegotiable for the Anchor's owner and chef, Roseann Grimm, the granddaughter of an Italian crab fisherman. Replicating her dish at home involves a lot of work, but the results are beyond delicious. To get ahead, you can make the marinara base and roasted garlic butter up to a couple days before. A half hour or so before you're ready to sit down and eat, bake the garlic bread and cook the seafood. Don't forget crab crackers - you'll need them at the table to get to the crab meat - and plenty of napkins!
Provided by Tejal Rao
Categories seafood, soups and stews, main course
Time 2h30m
Yield 3 to 4 servings
Number Of Ingredients 30
Steps:
- Toast the star anise by stirring frequently in a small skillet over medium heat until fragrant, about 3 minutes. Set aside.
- Make the marinara base: Add the onion, garlic cloves, bell pepper and olive oil to a food processor and pulse until finely chopped. (Or, finely chop the vegetables by hand, then add to the pot along with the oil.) Add the mixture to a large pot and cook over medium, stirring occasionally, until soft, translucent and light golden in places, about 5 minutes. Add the Bloody Mary mix, canned tomatoes and juices and tomato sauce. Get every last drop from the cans by swirling a splash of water into each one and tipping the remnants into the pot. Add the toasted star anise, oregano, basil, thyme, sugar and bay leaf, and stir to combine. Bring to a boil over medium-high, then reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer gently, uncovered, for 1 hour, stirring often so the bottom of the pot doesn't burn. (Makes 7 1/2 cups; see Tip.)
- While sauce simmers, roast the garlic: Heat oven to 375 degrees. Slice the whole garlic heads in half crosswise. Divide garlic, cut-sides up, between two pieces of aluminum foil, large enough to wrap the garlic up like two presents. Drizzle with olive oil, then wrap tightly. Set the foil packets on a baking sheet and roast for 1 hour, until the garlic is light brown and tender all the way through.
- Make the garlic butter: Once cool enough to handle, squeeze the garlic cloves out, discarding the skins. (You should have about 1 cup of roasted garlic.) Add to a food processor along with the softened butter and pulse until smooth and creamy. Or, smash the garlic to a paste and mix with the softened butter. (Makes 1 1/2 cups; see Tip.)
- Make the garlic bread: Heat oven to 400 degrees. Spread 1/2 cup garlic butter on the cut sides of bread and season with salt and pepper. Set the bread, buttered-sides up on a foil-lined baking sheet and bake until toasted and golden in spots, about 15 minutes. As soon as the garlic bread comes out of the oven, sprinkle it with dried oregano and the Parmesan. Cut into large pieces, then wrap the foil from the baking sheet around them to keep warm.
- While the bread bakes, make the cioppino: In a large Dutch oven or wide, heavy pot, add 4 cups of the marinara sauce, plus the clam juice, thyme sprigs and red-pepper flakes. Season generously with salt and pepper and heat over medium-high until simmering, about 5 minutes.
- Separate the legs and claws from the crab bodies. Once the sauce is simmering, gradually add the seafood, starting with the crab bodies. Cook for a couple minutes, then add the crab legs and claws to the pot and cook, stirring occasionally, for about 5 minutes.
- Add the clams, nestling them into the sauce around the edges, like numbers on a clock, cover with a lid and cook for about 6 minutes. Give the mixture a stir then add the mussels, in the same fashion as the clams. Cover and cook for another 3 minutes. Once the clams start to open, add the fish, gently nestling it into the sauce, and set the shrimp right on top to let them steam gently. Add 2 tablespoons of the garlic butter, put the lid back on and simmer until the fish cooks through and the shrimp get plump, about 5 minutes.
- To serve, transfer the cioppino to a deep serving bowl, being careful not to break up the delicate cooked fish. Perch the crab legs and claws on top and sprinkle with parsley. Serve with warm garlic bread on the side.
More about "best san francisco cioppino recipes"
SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO RECIPE | RECIPE - RACHAEL RAY SHOW
From rachaelrayshow.com
SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO SEAFOOD STEW - HOUSE OF NASH EATS
From houseofnasheats.com
THE BEST SAN FRANCISCO STYLE CIOPPINO RECIPE - THE …
From thespeedygourmet.net
BEST-EVER CIOPPINO RECIPE - HOW TO MAKE BEST-EVER …
From delish.com
4.7/5 (6)Calories 256 per serving
- Cook until fragrant, 1 minute more. Add wine and let boil until reduced by half, 3 to 5 minutes, scraping up browned bits with a wooden spoon.
SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO RECIPE: HOW TO MAKE IT
From tasteofhome.com
Cuisine North America, Pacific NorthwestTotal Time 1 hr 25 minsCategory DinnerCalories 298 per serving
SAN FRANCISCO BAY CIOPPINO RECIPE | FOOD NETWORK
From foodnetwork.com
Author Michael LomonacoSteps 4Difficulty 1 hr 55 min
SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO SEAFOOD STEW RECIPE THE RECIPES
From namus.youramys.com
ISLAND GOOD SEAFOOD RECIPE - ISLAND GOOD
From islandgood.ca
THE BEST CIOPPINO STARTS WITH THIS SECRET (HINT: IT’S IN THE BROTH)
From sunset.com
BEST CIOPPINO RECIPE SAN FRANCISCO - ALEX BECKER MARKETING
From alexbecker.org
CIOPPINO (SAN FRANCISCO SEAFOOD STEW) RECIPE - SERIOUS EATS
From seriouseats.com
CIOPPINO RECIPE|SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO - EASY RECIPES
From recipegoulash.cc
TOP 41 BEST CRAB CIOPPINO RECIPE RECIPES
From istimewa.dixiesewing.com
SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO SEAFOOD STEW RECIPE - THE …
From thespruceeats.com
SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO BEST RECIPES ALL YOU NEED IS FOOD
From stevehacks.com
CIOPPINO RECIPE | JAMES BEARD FOUNDATION
From jamesbeard.org
WHERE TO FIND THE BEST CIOPPINO IN SAN FRANCISCO - HONEST COOKING
From honestcooking.com
BEST SAN FRANCISCO CIOPPINO RECIPE : OPTIMAL RESOLUTION LIST
From recipeschoice.com
TOP 46 SAN FRANCISCO STYLE CIOPPINO RECIPE RECIPES
From tmax.pakasak.com
Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »
You'll also love