Category General

Spicing Up Your Crab Season

It’s crab season and we here at Parties That Cook are ready to provide you with a unique way to use your crab. From Santa Cruz to San Francisco, the temperature of the ocean creates a perfect habitat for crab season.

Although crab tastes delicious plain and dipped and butter, would you ever think of adding it to a quesadilla? Well we have, and it’s one of our favorites!

Crab Quesadillas:
1 pound of fresh crabmeat, picked through to remove any shells or cartilage 1 Tablespoon lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/3 cup green Pepitas (raw pumpkin seeds), toasted in a dry pan for 3 minutes
1 1/2 teaspoons fresh marjoram, chopped
2 Tablespoons parsley, chopped
4 ounces Cotija cheese, grated
7 ounces Monterey Jack, grated

Salsa:
3 dried chipotle peppers, stem and seeds removed
1 cup boiling-hot water (for steeping peppers)
2 medium tomatoes, cored and cut in half
1/4 small white onion, coarsely chopped
2 Tablespoons chopped cilantro leaves
1/3 cup canola oil
2 teaspoons coarse salt
2 teaspoons lime juice

3-5 Tablespoons canola oil (for cooking)
10 eight-inch flour tortillas

Garnish:
Cilantro leaves

Methods/Steps:
Quesadilla Filling/Crab: In a medium bowl, mix the crabmeat with the lemon juice and salt.  Set aside.

Quesadilla Filling/Other: In a bowl, combine the pepitas, marjoram, parsley and the grated/crumbled cheeses. Mix.

Salsa: Put tomatoes on a sheet pan and broil them, turning once, until blackened on both sides (about 3 minutes a side); remove and discard skins. Remove stem and seeds from the chipotles.  Toast chipotles in a small dry sauté pan, pressing with a spatula, until they turn deep red and smell aromatic, about 30 seconds a side.  In a medium bowl, put peppers into the hot water; cover with plastic wrap, and let stand until soft, about 15 minutes. Purée peppers, tomatoes, onion, and cilantro in a food processor until smooth.  With machine running, pour in oil in a slow, steady stream.  Season with salt.  Put in serving bowl.

Assemble/Cook Quesadillas: Add 1 Tablespoon of canola oil to a non-stick pan over medium heat.  Lay a tortilla flat in the pan. Place some cheese and crab filling on top, and cover with another tortilla.  Cook for a few minutes until golden, then turn and cook until toasty on the other side.  Remove from heat.  Repeat until all ingredients have been used.

Serve: Cut each quesadilla into 8 triangles. Place on the serving platter, surrounding the salsa. Garnish with leaves of cilantro.

These are perfect for an appetizer or could even be made larger for a main course. Get to cooking because the best crab comes during the winter.

Underground Dining

Fringe isn’t the only thing taking us back to the twenties; the new hot topic of dining experiences is traveling back in time too – underground dining. These “establishments” all vary in how they operate, who they let in, and what kind of dining experience is showcased, but they all have the similar style of prohibition era speakeasies. Whether it be being the first to reply to an email about the event, having a sponsor who is a current diner, or being a friend of the host, there is a protocol for each.

The locations, menus, and attendees change every event. With some of the underground dining groups, the chef changes from event to event as well.

In San Francisco, more underground dining groups exist than we can even be aware of. Ghetto Gourmet began in 2004 and has not only become one of the most well-known in the bay area but has also expanded worldwide. The site is now a forum for people interested in this kind of event to post dinner parties they have at their own homes, inviting other users on the site. Mamasan’s Bistro is a bit more secretive. The best way to get into one of these dining extravaganzas is knowing a previous diner. Mamasans is a family run “business” somewhere in the Mission. A signature pineapple, coconut, rum cocktail, buffet-style, and banana donuts featured at the end of every meal are trademarks of this unconventional establishment. GraffEats, Blind Pig, Joe’s Bustaurant, and Canvas Underground are also names thrown around the San Francisco underground dining scene.

A December article in the San Francisco Chronicle featured the rise of “nontraditional” dining in the city, listing Boulette’s Larder, Free Range Dining, Il Cane Rosso, Saison, and Ubuntu. So if you don’t feel like participating in the illegal scene of underground dining, but would love to live on the edge with an unconventional experience, these would be the choice for you.

Although these places are a little more hush hush than somewhere in the Zagat guide, it might take persistence to grab a spot because of the recent popularity!