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Showing posts with label Gourmet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gourmet. Show all posts

Seafood Restaurants Range from Casually Inexpensive to High-End Gourmet (Jhon Smith Ben)

Restaurants that serve seafood range from inexpensive fast-food drive-thrus to high-end, four star dining, and everything in between. Serving fresh or frozen seafood, seafood restaurants offer many choices to diners. The diner may choose a restaurant right at the ocean's edge or a chain restaurant located in the middle of a desert. The likelihood of being served frozen seafood rises with the distance from the ocean. Fresh seafood is readily available in coastal cities, although chains may still serve the frozen variety as designated by corporate structure.

Fresh seafood is a favorite of coastal dwellers. Many local people are familiar with fresh seafood markets that also cook their freshly caught offerings. The markets serve the cooked food in seating areas right outside the market doors. Al fresco dining is popular in many port cities. Frequently, the fishing boat that caught the seafood is visible from the dining area. This is usually an inexpensive way to enjoy the sea's bounty, while getting some fresh air and enjoying the local cooking. Walk-up kiosks that serve fresh seafood are found in many cities around the world. Word of mouth advertising keeps these small informal restaurants in business. Tourists visiting these areas have been known to ask for directions to such seafood restaurants. Local people are usually happy to provide the names and locations of these establishments, where the day's catch is prepared immediately. Spreading the good word about a seafood market helps ensure that the market will stay in business for the locals to enjoy.

Chain restaurants that offer previously frozen seafood are popular in many areas. People who enjoy seafood, but live a considerable distance from an ocean, rely on the frozen offerings, and are happy to order them. The cooks rely on recipes and techniques that have been researched and developed by corporate chefs. While the seafood comes to the restaurant frozen, it retains much of its nutritional goodness. Those who consider frozen seafood inferior have probably not tried it in recent years. Frozen seafood, especially shellfish, is sometimes difficult to distinguish from fresh, especially if it is prepared correctly. Chain restaurants that offer seated dining may be heavily reliant on frozen seafood; however, most offer a fresh catch of the day, no matter their geographic location.


A step up in offering fresh seafood is a sit-down restaurant with a menu and waitstaff. Many times, the seafood offered in these casual restaurants is fixed in a specific way. The chef may specialize in grilled fish or broiled shellfish, for instance. Others may offer fried fish or kebobs. Fish stews are another popular choice. Many times these fresh seafood restaurants are owned and operated by the chef. His menu may be highly regarded in the community. These restaurants are not part of a chain. Their success is dependent on offering the freshest of seafood in a tasty manner.

Fine dining seafood restaurants and dining establishments rely almost exclusively on freshly caught seafood that is frequently flown to their restaurant directly from the fishing boats. If the catch of the day is sufficiently iced, it can make a multi-hour trip without losing any of its freshness and tastiness. The chefs in fine dining restaurants have a way of making even the most humble fish or shellfish a gourmet delight. Special sauces or cooking techniques may be employed to enhance the flavor of the seafood. Prime fish, such as high quality tuna, is frequently made into sushi. These raw fish offerings are highly sought after. A good sushi chef can offer a tender, fully flavored morsel that will please even the most discriminating palate.

Many restaurants, which are not specifically designated as seafood restaurants, offer fish, shrimp, oysters, and other seafood items on their menus. Even high-end steakhouses will frequently offer a 'catch of the day,' a fresh fish that has been rushed to the restaurant via air. Many people, who enjoy eating fish rather than beef or pork, will still go to a steakhouse to be in the company of their friends. Chefs and management gladly offer fresh seafood for these discriminating diners.

While small, independent seafood restaurants found near coastal waters may offer the freshest fish, tasty menu offerings are available nearly everywhere.

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Spice Up Your Food with Gourmet Peppercorns (James S Moore)

Even the blandest cuisine can be easily spiced up with peppercorns. Connoisseurs of good food cannot resist the temptation of seasoning their foods with gourmet peppercorn. Comprising of finest quality peppercorns procured from the prominent peppercorn producing regions of the world, gourmet peppercorns add to your fine dining experience.

Peppercorn, one of the most widely used spice in the world, is the dried berry of the Piper nigrum plant. The finest quality peppercorns are procured from India, Vietnam, Indonesia, Madagascar and other tropical regions of the world. The hotness of peppercorn comes from its active ingredient piperine. Although, black and white peppercorns are widely used for seasoning, green and pink varieties are also available for enhancing the flavour of foods.

What are Gourmet Peppercorns?

The finest quality peppercorns are known as gourmet peppercorns. Available in gourmet spice stores, they are widely used for seasoning traditional as well as avant-garde cuisines. The rich aroma and sharp flavor help to distinguish gourmet peppercorns from the ubiquitous peppercorns commonly available in stores. Good food aficionados appreciate the high standard of the spice, which makes the gourmet peppercorns the most sought after spice in the fine dining world.

Types of Gourmet Peppercorns

Black Peppercorn


The unripe fruits of the Piper nigrum plant are cooked in hot water and then dried to produce black peppercorn. The finest quality black peppercorns are produced in the south and southeastern Asian countries. India is a key producer of black pepper. The finest quality black peppercorns, commonly known as Malabar and Tellicherry black peppercorns, are procured from the Malabar Coast of Kerala in South India. In Borneo, Malaysia, the Sarawak pepper is among the finest quality peppercorns in the world. Peppercorns produced in Vietnam are noted for their strong flavour, making Vietnamese black peppercorn an important ingredient in recipes around the world. The island of Sumatra produces Lampung peppercorn, a prominent black pepper variety.

White Peppercorn

White pepper is the fully dried ripe seed of the Piper nigrum plant from which the dark colored husk has been removed. White pepper is commonly used for seasoning light colored dishes. Widely used in Chinese cuisine, white peppercorn is procured from the same areas that produce black peppercorn. White Muntok pepper is a popular white pepper variety produced in Indonesia. The Vietnamese white peppercorns are noted for rich aroma and hot flavor.

Green Peppercorn

Popular in French cuisine, green peppercorn is the dried unripe fruit of the Piper nigrum plant.

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