Inspiration has been a recurring theme for recent columns. It often
comes from sources and at times we least expect. Being a chef has its perks and
drawbacks. One drawback is everyone who has ever boiled water wants to talk food
with you. So it was when I started at the Mad Batter on Jackson Street a few
years ago. I A
few days later he brought in some wing sauce for me to try. Great, I thought,
another amateur cook looking for validation. This was no doctored store sauce.
This was the real deal. The searing pain of chipotles and serranos laced with
habeneros was unmistakable. This sauce wasn’t all heat but artfully layered
f My friend Michael “Ish” Williams is not a professionally trained chef, but his food is a fusion of backwoods and Bocuse. He has given me the finer details of the proper way to cook muskrat and is a master of the grill and smoker. Neither one of us works at the Mad Batter anymore, but we get together over
at the Shrivers (current and former Batter chefs Chris and Lisa). With Ish and
me, the conversation always centers around food – be it a discussion of a recent
Alton Brown episode or some new ingredient one of us has run across. We gather
togeth One Sunday this summer, while enjoying a few cold beers in the driveway, Ish arrived with a mysterious foil packet. The result? After about 20 minutes on the grill, the most perfectly cooked striped bass. Ish prepared the bass in a coconut milk, curry sauce with mango that had us scraping the foil for every last morsel. I promptly adapted the dish for a fish grilling class at school. A few weeks ago I ran into Ish in North Cape May and as usual we chatted
about food and talked about some dishes we might grill at Chris’ the next day.
That next
This month, enjoy some recipes inspired by friend and culinary adventurer Ish. (Yes, it is true that I ran a similar striped bass recipe in the July issue of CapeMay.com, but I have to confess, Ish’s is a notch above even my own concoction.) Red Curry Striped Bass
Clean bass. Mix all ingredients in bowl. Place bass on oiled foil. Pour over sauce/marinade. Wrap fish tightly in foil. Grill 15-20 minutes. Open. Serve with steamed rice. Wing Sauce of Death Caution: This sauce is deadly. Use gloves while handling pepper and do not inhale deeply while cooking.
Melt butter. Sweat peppers and garlic. Sauté 4-5 minutes. Do not brown. Add vinegar, honey and citrus juices. Simmer 5 minutes. Store in plastic jar. Serve with hot wings. |