| Cover Story | Plant Life | On Fitness | Northwest Living | Taste | Arts special | Now & Then |
WRITTEN BY GREG ATKINSON PHOTOGRAPHED BY BETTY UDESEN |
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| Why Go Naked? The right dress can bring out the briny best in an oyster |
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Saucing the oyster is an art. Be it a surreptitious squeeze of lemon juice or a classic Champagne mignonette sauce, a little hint of something tart can brighten the flavors of the shellfish as unobtrusively as a comfortable swimsuit and a towel improve a trip to the beach. Some of the more heavy-handed oyster toppings, though, are more like a cooler full of junk food, a boom box and a giant striped umbrella. They can diminish rather than enhance your enjoyment. Doe Webb, the late wife of William Webb, who founded Westcott Bay Gourmet Shellfish Farm on San Juan Island, used to claim that no sauce could improve an oyster. "I usually don't like anything on my oysters," she told me once, "but I would like a spoonful of that citrus salsa on one, if you don't mind."
The salsa was something that grew out of a recipe I found in Roger Vergé's "Entertaining in the French Style." Vergé's "Oysters with Three Citrus Fruits" captured my imagination the moment I saw it. Originally, it was just that segments of citrus with just a smidgen of crushed coriander seeds but I gilded the lily with curls of zest from the citrus skins, and careful little spoons full of sugar, salt and pepper. I exchanged grapefruit for lemon. Gradually, the formula became my own, and while citrus fruits don't grow anywhere near the Northwest, I have come to think of the salsa as an irrefutable part of my brand of Northwest cooking.
But raspberry mignonette didn't really reach its full potential until someone thought to freeze it. I think it was Sally MacArthur who brought this frozen mignonette thing to its current state of the art. At least it was at a restaurant under her influence that I first sampled the mignonette in its frozen form. MacArthur, known both as Czarina of Seafood and director of cuisine and concept development for Consolidated Restaurants, did not make her mignonette with raspberry vinegar but with red-wine vinegar. She says she got the idea while she was the chef on an oyster tour in France. "It comes from that very French tradition of keeping and serving oysters cold, cold, cold, with ice underneath and ice on top. But I never thought to use raspberry vinegar." Now frozen mignonette is practically ubiquitous. Still, no one seems to be tired of it. When oysters are served chilled on the half shell, I prefer sauces that are oil-free, tangy and bright. When oysters are cooked, they change, and the accompanying sauce must conform. Not long ago, I served steamed oysters with a glaze of apple cider enhanced with black pepper and a splash of apple-cider vinegar. The cider had been boiled down to concentrated essence, and its flavor was big and bold but simultaneously sweet and comfortable. I would never have served that sauce with a chilled oyster. Often, when oysters are cooked, they want a little fat, a little cream perhaps, or some buttered breadcrumbs. One of my favorite ways to serve oysters hot involves finely chopped mushrooms, sautéed in butter with sherry wine and a crumbly topping of breadcrumbs and cheese. I know it sounds like this heavy casserole on the half shell would totally overwhelm the oyster; it doesn't. Hot oysters on the half shell also hold up very well beneath a spoonful of the wonderful whipped egg yolk and sweet wine custard known as sabayon. Essentially the same thing as the Italian zabaglione, sabayon is made savory instead of sweet simply by the omission of sugar. Steam the oyster open, remove it from the shell. Put a bit of shredded spinach in the empty shell, put the oyster back, then spoon on a dollop of the sabayon sauce and pass the oyster under the broiler. Eating oysters in sabayon is like camping on the beach. The velvety sauce is like an old-fashioned sleeping bag lined with flannel that wraps the happy camper inside a cocoon under the stars. Greg Atkinson, Canlis executive chef, is the author of "In Season" (1997) and "The Northwest Essentials Cookbook" (1999) from Sasquatch Books. Betty Udesen is a Seattle Times staff photographer.
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| Cover Story | Plant Life | On Fitness | Northwest Living | Taste | Arts special | Now & Then |