BAKED OYSTERS WITH SPINACH FENNEL PURéE AND CRISP-FRIED SHALLOTS
Steps:
- In a small skillet heat the oil over moderately high heat until it is hot but not smoking and in it fry the shallots, stirring, until they are browned and crisp. Transfer the shallots with a slotted spoon to paper towels to drain, discarding the oil from the skillet, and sprinkle them with salt to taste. The fried shallots may be made 2 days in advance and kept wrapped in the paper towels at room temperature.
- In a kettle cook the spinach in the water clinging to the leaves with the fennel seeds, covered, over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, for 3 minutes, or until it is wilted. In a colander drain the spinach mixture and press out the excess liquid. In a food processor purée the spinach mixture with 2 tablespoons of the butter and salt and pepper to taste and transfer the purée to a small bowl. In the small skillet cook the fennel bulb in the remaining 1 tablespoon butter over moderately low heat, stirring, until it is just tender and stir it into the spinach purée. The spinach fennel purée may be made 1 day in advance and kept, its surface covered with plastic wrap, chilled.
- Arrange the oysters in the reserved shells in a jelly-roll pan filled with some of the coarse salt (to balance the shells), divide the spinach fennel purée among them, and bake the oysters in a preheated 400°F. oven for 12 to 15 minutes, or until they are just cooked through. Top the oysters with the fried shallots, garnish them with the fennel sprigs, and arrange them on a platter filled with more of the coarse salt.
- To shuck oysters:
- Scrub the oysters thoroughly with a stiff brush under running cold water. Hold each oyster flat side up on a work surface with the hinged end away from you, insert an oyster knife between the shells at the hinged end, twisting the knife to pop open the shell, and slide the blade against the flat upper shell to cut the large muscle and free upper shell. If the shell crumbles and cannot be opened at the hinge, insert the knife between the shells at the curved end of the oyster, pry the shells open, and sever the large muscle. Break off and discard the upper shell and slide the knife under the oyster to release it from the bottom shell.
CRISPY OVEN-FRIED OYSTERS
I found this recipe in one of those mostly resistable check-out stand line books. This one was for Irish recipes for St. Patty's Day. Living here in the Pacific Northwest we LOVE oysters, but frying them, (the way we love them best), is bad for us so we seldom do it. If this recipe works it will be well worth the $5 I paid for the book which didn't really contain much else that interested me. The author of this recipe, Marie Rizzio, won first place in a seafood contest in the hors d'oeuvres category with it, so my hubby and I are looking forward to trying these little gems. We will use very fresh extra small, I don't see this working for large oysters. And I'm including the sauce as that's part of Marie's recipe, but we won't use it, just to keep the health factor. I sure hope this works for us! Let me know if it works for you! NOTE: 4/11/08. Made this tonight as an appy. I used 1/2 pint of very fresh extra small fresh oysters and they were wonderful. (About 15), therefor using half the other ingredients. I would not suggest using anything but extra small or small. These were crispy enough to make hubby and I believers that we can enjoy oven-baked oysters way more often now for health reasons other than fried. If you do more, use 2 baking sheets so you can place the oysters apart and avoid steaming them rather than crisping them. Also, I simply sprayed an oven sheet with cooking spray, then sprayed the coated oysters right on the sheet with a good spray of cooking spray rather than the 2 tablespoons of oil, thereby cutting alot more fat! We dipped them in tartar sauce. YUM!
Provided by Chef PotPie
Categories < 30 Mins
Time 25m
Yield 30 appetizers, 8-10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- In a shallow bowl, combine the flour, salt and pepper.
- In another shallow bowl, whisk eggs.
- In a third bowl, combine the bread crumbs, Romano cheese, parsley and garlic salt.
- Coat oysters with flour mixture, then dip in eggs, and coat with crumb mixture.
- Place in a greased 15-in. x 10-in. x 1-in. baking pan; drizzle with oil.
- Bake at 400° for 15 minutes or until golden brown.
- Meanwhile, in a small bowl, whisk the jalapeno mayonnaise ingredients.
- Serve with oysters.
- Yield: about 2-1/2 dozen (about 2/3 cup jalapeno mayonnaise).
Nutrition Facts : Calories 311.8, Fat 16, SaturatedFat 6, Cholesterol 106.5, Sodium 535.2, Carbohydrate 24.9, Fiber 1.1, Sugar 1.7, Protein 16.5
BAKED OYSTERS AND SPINACH
Make and share this Baked Oysters and Spinach recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Miss Annie
Categories Vegetable
Time 30m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Place the spinach in a large saucepan, cover, and steam over moderate heat for about 5 minutes or until tender.
- Drain the spinach, refresh under cold water, squeeze dry, and chop finely.
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
- In a large skillet, heat half the butter, add the onion, and sauté over moderate heat for 5 minutes, stirring often.
- Add the spinach, nutmeg, salt, pepper, and cream.
- Stir well and cook over moderate heat for about 2 minutes, stirring in a few bread crumbs if necessary to thicken the mixture.
- Add the oysters and dill and stir well.
- Spoon the mixture into a well-buttered baking dish, sprinkle the top with bread crumbs, dot with the remaining butter, and bake for 10 to 15 minutes or until the top is golden brown.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 435, Fat 27.2, SaturatedFat 15.1, Cholesterol 150.3, Sodium 452.1, Carbohydrate 28.2, Fiber 3.7, Sugar 2.7, Protein 21.1
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