Saturday, January 13, 2007

Baja Style Fish Tacos



Ah, Baja street food...the memories of driving down with friends to Rosarito for spring break. Piling more people into a hotel room than is legally allowable and then waking up with at least one more person that didn’t drive down with us. We usually got our hand stamped in the afternoon at the big club (Papas and Beer or Senor Frogs?) so we could wait in the shorter line in the evening, but we usually started our night at Rock and Role Lobster. And while there were usually only weekend romances with people from UCLA we ran into down there (why we drove for hours to just hang out with more UCLA people is beyond me), this is the infamous location where my college roommate Sylvia met her wonderful husband Paul. (BTW, not me Mom, remember I had a college boyfriend, or as Alvie always wondered, why bring sand to the beach?) Sylvia saw Paul sitting on a speaker and thought he was cute. Then while a group of us danced he passed by on the dance floor. Not knowing what do to (“oh my god here he comes, should I talk to him…what do I do), Chris decided to shove Sylvia into him. As Paul helped her get back on her feet he asked if she wanted to dance…and the rest is history. And yes there is a picture to commemorate the day. I took it, and while for some reason the camera took a crooked picture with the top of their heads cut off, they still have it framed with pride. They are one of my favorite couples…Rosarito…it can happen.

So after a night of dancing and $2.00 Coronas with lime, fish tacos are the perfect thing to eat. These were a lot of fun to make at home, they tasted great and were a lot lighter than the ones
you get in Baja.


I pretty much followed the recipe exactly, I don’t think I’ve ever deep fried anything before. I used Corona for the beer batter, because it’s light tasting. I don’t like beer (except in Rosarito, uh?), so this worked best for me. Also I used cabbage instead of lettuce, since that is how they are served in Baja. And next time I would love to make the sauce with Mexican Crema or Crème Fraiche instead of Mayonnaise to get closer to the original.


We served these with refried beans. Peter and I will definitely be making these again.




Recipe: Fish Tacos (Cooks Illustrated, “The Quick Recipe”)
Serves 4-6

Ingredients:
1 cup mayonnaise
1 ½ tsp juice from 1 lime, plus one lime cut into wedges
1 chipotle chile packed in adobo sauce, minced to a paste
Salt
4 cups vegetable oil
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
½ tsp ground cumin
¼ tsp cayenne pepper
1 cup beer
1 ½ lbs sturdy white fish fillets (cod, halibut, or haddock), cut into 4 by 1-inch pieces
12 small corn tortillas
½ head iceberg lettuce, cored and shredded fine (I used cabbage)
Hot pepper sauce, such as Tabasco (I used Tapatio)

Adjust an oven rack to the middle position and heat the oven to 200 degrees. Mix the mayonnaise, lime juice, chile and salt to taste in a small bowl; set aside.

Meanwhile, heat the oil in a large dutch oven or heavy-bottomed saucepan over medium heat until the oil registers 350 degrees on a thermometer. Whisk together the flour, cumin, cayenne, and 1 teaspoon salt in a large bowl. Whisk in the beer until the batter is completely smooth. Add half of the fish to the batter and stir to coat. Cover a wire cooling rack with several layers of paper towels and set if over a rimmed baking sheet.

Using tongs, transfer the fish to the oil and fry until golden brown (making sure the pieces don’t touch, 4 to 5 minutes). Transfer the fish to the paper towel-lined rack and set the baking sheet in the oven to keep the fish warm. Repeat the process with the remaining fish. While the fish cooks, toast the tortilla, 1 at a time, in a skillet over medium-high heat until softened and speckled with brown, 20 to 30 seconds per side. Wrap the tortillas in a slightly moistened kitchen towel to keep warm.
For assembly, smear each tortilla with mayonnaise and top with shredded lettuce. Add 1 piece of fish to each tortilla and serve immediately, folded in half, passing hot pepper sauce and lime wedges at the table.

3 comments:

Nina said...

Just realized I could comment here.
Yum!!! These are making me hungry! Next time you make them can you ship some over to the UK for me? ;-)

Anonymous said...

Hi Cynthia, This is Anah's mom, Carlotta. Love the blog. As a great fan of the cuisine, I hope to come back and check out your progress. Hope you are enjoying your new job, and for sure, don't start another dissertation... a book, maybe....

Anonymous said...

update, update! (Anah)