Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Gemelli with Spicy Scallops and Snap Peas' imprimido.

Receta Gemelli with Spicy Scallops and Snap Peas
by Monte Mathews

You might want to hide

after what I turned up...

read on...Here’s

a food writer’s dilemma for you: Say you

discovered a great recipe so full of flavor and so easy to make, you literally

jumped on your MacPro and started to extoll its praises the morning after you

made it. You were taken, not just with

its ease of preparation, but with the price you paid for its key

ingredient. And its pedigree impressed

you: The Chef who created the recipe had

a reputation as a 2013 “Rising Star” semi-finalist for a James Beard Award and

was the winner of StarChefs.com 2013 New York Rising Stars Award. You were unfamiliar with his restaurant but

quickly discovered that the New York Times’ Pete Wells had given it 2 stars in

2012. Then you probed a little deeper

and things got very dicey.

the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch app for my I-Phone. It’s free!

You take it along and whenever you order fish in a restaurant or go to

the fishmongers, you can quickly check the status whenever you want to.

But if you stupidly leave your phone at home,

it’s no help at all. Which is had

done. I purchased my fish. Only the next day did I go to http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/seafoodwatch.aspx, the web page that,

like the app, helps people make educated choices about what fish to eat and

what to avoid. Their recommendations are

based on both what is healthy for our oceans and for ourselves. Since fish stocks are diminishing at an

alarming rate, they rank fish as “Best Choices” and point out ones to “Avoid”.

But they don’t leave you hanging:

There’s a “Good Alternatives” given too.

Much to my surprise and disappointment, the fish I used the first time I

made this dish was rated “Avoid”. They

could have added “Abysmal” to the rating. It turns out that not only is this

fish in short supply and overfished, the method used to catch it, bottom

trawling, ‘results in high levels of accidental catch and damage to the sea floor’. But what explains why this fish was so

modestly price at one of the best fishmongers in New York? At 9.99 a lb., it was practically tilapia-priced. Perhaps, every other seafood-conscious New

Yorker had used the Seafood watch app and caused the fish to be

un-sellable. But that was not the only

thing my research turned up.

"B"s are often hidden behind plants

but here's a creative way of

hiding one. Right

under Mr. Wells’ review of our Rising Star Chef’s restaurant was a shocking

link: the 2 star place had been shuttered by the Health Department in July

because “Inspectors observed food held at dangerous temperatures, contaminated

food and food ready for consumption touched with bare hands” the department

The restaurant’s owners blamed the July heat and said their walk-in

refrigerator struggled to maintain a constant temperature. I might cut the guy some slack but I read

on. The reason the inspectors were there

in the first place was because the restaurant had received a “B” grade and 23

violation points when it was last inspected in January. Now we’re not talking

about the cringe-worthy Chinese Take-Out place around the corner from us where the “B”

is no surprise. This is somewhere where

the cheapest bowl of pasta is $18. And where Zagat’s gives the average cost of

a meal with a drink and the tip is $59. I felt ripped off even though I’d never even been to the place. But then there was the recipe…

Here was a bowl of pasta, using the corkscrew

shaped Gemelle that was topped with an unconventional sauce. The heat of

habanero chilies was tempered with a little garlic, a splash of vinegar and

tiny bit of sugar. The fish cooked in

olive oil and lemon for just minutes. Crisp snow peas and some butter were

added the last three minutes. It was

ambrosia in a bowl. What was a fellow to

do? Back to the Monterey Bay Seafood watch.

The “Alternative” to the fish I used was the scallop; and scallops are a

“Best Choice”. Farmed, they’re raised

with minimal environmental impact. And

wild caught scallops also make the list because they’re filter feeders that

live on tiny particles filtered out of the waters they live in. They actually improve water quality and

clarity. So back to the kitchen I went

and made the dish I am sharing with you today.

What was the fish that caused the entire ruckus? Skate.

That strange sea world creature that’s as docile as it is frightening to

look at. Look, but don’t eat skate,

please. And as to that 2 stars “B” rated

restaurant? If you’re dying to know,

you. I just want to cut its Rising Star

Chef a break for giving me the bare bones of a dish this good. Here’s the recipe:

Recipe for Gemelle with Spicy Scallops and Snap Peas

Serves 4. Takes 30 minutes to make.

cooking water and cook until the peas are crisp-tender, 3 minutes.

Fold in the pasta until it is coated; add more pasta cooking water if

the pasta seems dry. Season with salt and pepper. Transfer the pasta to bowls,

drizzle with olive oil and serve.