Jean-Georges Vongerichten is one of the most famous chefs in the world. His flagship Jean-Georges in New York City has two Michelin stars and four stars from The New York Times. The award-winning ...
1. Prepare the Snapper Fillets: Season the fish with salt and pepper. 2. In a large skillet heat 2 tablespoons of the oil. Add the snapper searing on each side until cooked through, about 3 minutes ...
Be sure to pat the snapper fillets dry with paper towels to remove as much moisture as you can before slicing. Using a very sharp blade, draw a knife down the length of 1 snapper fillet to make ...
The skin is almost tender enough to cut with a spoon, but if that doesn’t appeal to you, remove the skin and cook the fillets the same way. The spiced butter won’t stay completely on the fillets but ...
At Canele in Atwater Village, chef Corina Weibel serves a perfectly-seared snapper fillet perched atop a striking, delicious pile of vegetables and house-made croutons -- a bread salad of sorts. It ...
Place the tomatoes and capers into a baking dish. Coat with a drizzle of olive oil and season with cracked pepper. Cook in a moderate oven for 15 minutes. Take out the baking dish and place the ...
A zesty lemon caper sauce is all you need to dress up this simple pan-seared fish. Grace Parisi a former senior test kitchen editor for Food & Wine, where she wrote several successful monthly columns: ...
That sound you heard last week coming from the southern part of the state was the collective cries of joy from happy fishermen heralding the extension of the state’s red snapper fishing season. The ...
Subscribe to Marlin magazine and get a year of highly collectible, keepsake editions – plus access to the digital edition and archives. Sign up for the free Marlin email newsletter. We used red ...
From the first bite, my Crispy Baked Snapper Fillets deliver a delightful contrast of taste and textures with the satisfying crunch of a perfectly seasoned panko crust with succulent, moist snapper ...
Alex, my fish guy, said the snapper was beautiful. And Alex, the friendly and baby-faced owner of Rosendo Fish Market on Twenty-second Street in Manhattan, doesn't bullshit. He doesn't push the stuff ...