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Sea Scallops with Sesame and Wakame
Recipe serves
:
6
A Little Background
A lot of recipes you find that incorporate Sea Scallops tend to drown them in rich sauces. I think that this is a bit of a shame as rich sauces are best reserved for flavourless and texture lacking seafood's, something that a nice fresh scallop is definitely not. This recipe is very simple to prepare and although it incorporates some strong flavours it still leaves the Scallop as the star of the show. I tend to use the Queensland variety, as I find them to be the perfect size and have beautiful ocean sweetness. Obviously if you're not in Australia it will be a bit difficult to find this variety, but find a fish monger you can trust and ask him or her what they recommend.
What you'll need
1 dozen Queensland Scallops on the half shell (or comparable variety)
2 tbsps sesame seeds
Mirin
Sesame oil
Vegetable oil
Sea salt
Cracked black pepper
Japanese pickled ginger
1 X 50 gram packet dried Wakame seaweed shreds
What to do
Place the Wakame seaweed into a small mixing bowl and cover with boiling water and a splash of mirin, allow to sit for about 5-10 minutes and strain.
Toast the sesame seeds over a med flame in a dry pan, continue to keep the pan moving until seeds are golden and nutty and remove from pan immediately.
Gently slide a paring knife under each scallop and remove them from their shells and set aside.
Wash and rinse any residue or growths off each scallop shell, rinse well and set aside.
Season both sides of the scallops lightly with the salt and pepper.
Heat a pan over med to high heat with 1-2 tbsps vegetable oil and sear scallops for about 30-50 seconds per side (depending on size of scallops and personal preference. Note that a slightly under cooked scallop is fine to eat and will remain more tender than a fully cooked one.)
Remove the scallops and return them to their shells.
Place a small pinch of the seaweed on each scallop and then place a pinch of the pickled ginger on the seaweed.
Gently drizzle a very small amount of sesame oil over each garnished scallop, and finish with a sprinkle of toasted sesame seeds.
Grab one of your more casual friends to carry the tray of scallops around to your less casual friends so you can finish the Sake you started earlier.
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Recipe By
Paul Hegeman
Styling By
Paul Hegeman
Photography By
Jason Hamilton
© Chef's Pencil 2007