Posts Tagged ‘and’
Louisiana Seafood Cook Off – Louisiana Seafood Promotion and Marketing Board
Louisiana Seafood Cook Off – Chefs from all across the state come to compete and show the world that they are King of Louisiana Seafood.
For more information concerning the Louisiana Seafood Cook Off, accurate news about Louisiana Seafood, and oil spill updates visit:
http://www.louisianaseafood.com/
Duration : 0:10:27
NEW ORLEANS COMMERCIALS – Seafood City & more
also Miller the Killer, Ponchartrain Beach (2), Frankie and Johnny’s, McKenzie’s, Godchaux’s (2), Rosenberg’s, LaBiche’s. (More WHO DAT vids at my channel)
Duration : 0:4:33
Ching He Huang/Chinese Food Made Easy/Seafood/Langoustine and samphire stir fry
Ching He Huang/Chinese Food Made Easy/Seafood
Langoustine and samphire stir fry
http://www.chinghehuang.com/
http://www.mogu.com.tw/
Ingredients
1 tbsp groundnut oil
2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
6-8 cooked langoustines (or other large prawns)
1 tsp Shaoxing rice wine
150g/5oz fresh samphire, woody stems removed, or marsh samphire, preserved in brine
150g/5oz baby leeks, trimmed
2 spring onions, trimmed and cut into 4cm/2in pieces
1 tsp light soy sauce
sea salt, to taste
Method
1. Heat a wok until smoking and add the groundnut oil. Add the garlic and stir fry for a few seconds.
2. Add the Dublin Bay prawns and stir fry for 1-2 minutes, then add the Shaoxing rice wine and cook for another few seconds. Stir in the fresh samphire, then add the leeks and spring onions. Stir fry for one minute, then season, to taste, with the light soy sauce and sea salt.
3. To serve, spoon onto a serving plate and drizzle over any remaining juices from the wok.
Ching makes a dish that’s great for when you’ve got guests: use garlic chives instead of preserved samphire if necessary
Duration : 0:6:24
Catalina Offshore Products – Preparing an exotic sushi roll
Here at Catalina Offshore Products we recently visited Bay Park Fish Co. in San Diego and brought by some of our famous fresh Seafood for the sushi chef to prepare. This video is intended to be used as a informational source to our buyers
Duration : 0:2:13
Show-Me Seafood (MU Extension)
Ray Wright wasnt sure what he would find when he drained a quarter-acre pond at the University of Missouri Bradford Research and Extension Center near Columbia.
Four months earlier, at the beginning of June, the MU research specialist had stocked the pond with 4,000 juvenile freshwater prawns bought from a Texas hatchery. Freshwater prawns are a species of shrimp native to Malaysia, which has a tropical climate very different from that of mid-Missouri.
Summer and fall had been cool in Missouri this year. Raccoons and frogs were using the pond as an all-you-can-eat buffet. How many prawns had survived, and how big were they? Wright wouldnt know until the pond was more than half-empty.
Theres a tremendous amount of risk involved, he said. Corn and beans—Missouri farmers know how to grow them. They know the risks and they know how to manage them.
When it comes to raising Seafood in Missouri, however, producers are still learning what works and what doesnt. With prawns, when the temperature goes below 60, youve lost your crop, Wright said. You dont want to learn that after youve invested $10,000. You want someone else to learn that, so you know that when the temperature gets in that range, its time to get the prawns out.
Raising aquatic species for profit is an agricultural endeavor that requires special skills, knowledge and dedication to be successful, said Charles Hicks, aquaculture specialist at Lincoln University. Its critical that potential producers do their homework.
Making that homework a little easier is why MU and Lincoln University are partners in research and extension programming aimed at supporting the development of a thriving aquaculture industry in Missouri.
The focus is on practical, cost-effective techniques for raising species such as prawns, bluegill sunfish and largemouth bass for food markets in the Midwest, said Bob Pierce, MU Extension fisheries and wildlife specialist.
The U.S. imports more than 80 percent of its seafood. At the same time, Americans are increasingly interested in fresh, locally grown food. Can Missouri help meet the demand for domestic fish and shellfish?
The state has more than 300,000 acres of farm ponds, notes Leslie Hearne, an MU graduate student in fisheries and wildlife sciences. Those ponds could become a rich source of protein and profit, she said.
Hearne is doing research at Lincoln Universitys Carver Farm, which has an aquaculture facility that includes more than 20 quarter-acre and tenth-acre ponds as well as indoor tanks for breeding and hatching fingerlings.
Were trying to develop a fast-growing strain of bluegill that can get to market in less than two years, she said. Bluegill, a native sunfish common to Missouri farm ponds, typically takes about three years to grow to a marketable weight of about half a pound.
Researchers also are developing diets and feeding schedules to maximize bluegill growth while minimizing the amount of food they need. According to Pierce, reducing the cost of producing marketable food-grade bluegill could make the fish a competitive local alternative to popular aquaculture species such as tilapia.
Keeping costs down was why Wright took a mostly low-tech approach to his freshwater prawn project. We dont want to spend $10,000-$20,000 on aeration systems and meters even though it might help, because most farms are not going to have that, he said. We want to have something they already have in place.
Wright knew he was cutting it close with his late-September harvest, so he was relieved when prawns started gushing out of the ponds outlet pipe by the dozen. He ended up collecting more than 2,700 prawns, which were packed in ice, shipped to the MU campus and served that night to hundreds of students who had the rare opportunity to enjoy fresh-caught Missouri seafood.
Eric Cartwright, executive chef for MU Campus Dining Services, jumped at the chance to buy Wrights prawns. As a chef and as a food lover, the prospect of getting some fresh prawns made me super-excited, he said. When you get a product that was literally swimming that morning, the fresh flavor you can get from that is hard to describe.
Cartwright isnt the only one excited about Missouri aquaculture.
When we have tours at the farm, it always gets attention, Wright said. Everyones excited about fish. When we ask if they want to see fish production, all the hands go up. That should tell you something.
A freshwater prawn production fact sheet will soon be available from MU Extension and Lincoln University. Information also is available from the USDAs Southern Regional Aquaculture Center at http://aquanic.org/publicat/usda_rac/srac.htm.
Duration : 0:1:57
LIVE & FROZEN SEAFOOD FOR EXPORT
EXFOODS PERU is the only certified and authorized exporter of live hydrobiologcal species (Seafood) in Peru. Our principal markets are Japan, USA, Canada, Europe and Asia. We are looking forward in doing business with you.
Duration : 0:3:32
Catalina Offshore Products – California Gold Uni Nigiri
Catalina Offshore Products – California Gold Uni Nigiri. Here at Catalina Offshore Products we recently visited Bay Park Fish Co. in San Diego and brought by some of our famous fresh Seafood for the sushi chef to prepare. This video is intended to be used as a informational source to our buyers.
Duration : 0:1:29
Shane’s Seafood & BBQ – Shreveport, LA
Shane’s Seafood & BBQ 318-865-6088, 318-687-3120, 318-742-8112 http://www.yellowbook.com/profile/shanes-seafood-and-bbq_1845658792.html
Duration : 0:0:36
Cheap and Easy Chicken and Seafood Paella Recipe (Without Saffron)
Chicken and Seafood Paella:
Ingredients:
200gm Aborio Rice (Italian Rice)
800-900ml Chicken Stock
2 Chopped Spring Onion (Green onion)
1tsp turmeric powder (Replaces Saffron and gives a similar colour and drops budget)
1 Capsicum (red Pepper)
2 tsp paprika
1 chopped tomato
1 large chicken breast
1/2c flour
1 squid tube
200gm salmon meat
Oil (any)
S+P to season
Lemon or lime to serve in wedges
Instructions in video.
Makes 3-4 servings of Paella
Note: this is the saving money recipe not the traditional one, if u want a traditional paella use rabbit, saffron and a whole mix of different Seafood eg. mussels, prawns, octopus etc.
Duration : 0:6:56
smoked fish | Mississippi River Catfish | Frog Legs |
Mississippi River Fish, Mississippi River Catfish, Smoked Fish, Frog leg, Turtle Jerky, Vallley Fish and Cheese, Prairie du Chien Wisconsin, very unique, high quality smoked, fresh, frozen fish and speciality foods. Mike Valley is the premeir retailer and wholesaler for Seafood products. Smoked all fish on premises with his secret seasonings and hickory smoke. 608-326-4719
Duration : 0:10:19