Good morning. I once had a fantastic wood-fired seafood pizza at the Seaside Café in Key West, Fla.: sweet and salty, luxurious with lobster meat, cream sauce, fontina and puréed garlic. The meat was plush, pillowy, perfectly cooked, and I wondered about that. If I put knuckles of cooked lobster on a pizza in a 1,000-degree wood oven, they’d turn into rubber chew toys.
After I inhaled my pie, I asked the restaurant’s chef, Rafe Halpern, how he pulled it off. He chuckled before answering in a kind of bemused whisper. “Mayonnaise,” he said. Rolling the pieces in the emulsion provides a fatty protection from the intense heat of the oven, allowing them to brown without drying out. I thought that was genius.
Ali Slagle uses a similar technique for her grilled shrimp with chile and garlic (above), coating them in baking soda and mayonnaise to achieve a marvelous crust without overcooking. (J. Kenji López-Alt uses mayo as a secret ingredient when he’s cooking chicken and other meats.) Let’s try that on Saturday night?
With perhaps a blackberry crisp for dessert, served with a cardamom custard sauce?
I’d love a Denver omelet for breakfast on Sunday, a diner classic with onions, bell peppers, ham and cheese. (I’d thought it a Colorado concoction, but some say it honors the 1869 arrival of the transcontinental train line in Denver City, Utah.)
And then a big Sunday supper, starting with a creamy collard greens dip spiced with shito, a powerful spicy-sweet pepper sauce from Ghana. To follow: jerk chicken with pickled bananas. (Don’t have a grill? Sheet-pan jerk salmon instead!)
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Now, it’s nothing to do with barley or whelks, but when it’s a Skip Hollandsworth byline above a long article in Texas Monthly, you’ve got to read it. True crime.