Evil Ronnie wrote:and a recipe for a sardine dip (to be eaten with ritz crackers) which a South Carolinian mentioned was mandatoryat such events. Gotta try this sometime. GWiv, are you listening?
Evil,
Here's the Sardine recipe I, as you guessed, saved, though I haven't made it yet. Let's add this to the menu when we get together for gravlax made from Copper River, cracker crumb fried shrimp, pimento cheese and pulled pork.
I've been thinking about those shrimp ever since I heard your description of the recipe, I guess you just can't beat the combination of professional chef and native of the South. Speaking of combinations, where the heck did you ever come up with the idea of putting duck fat in your matzo balls?
By the way, have you had Erik's pimento cheese? Erik makes a slightly adapted recipe from Saveur that's just excellent.
Enjoy,
Gary
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Sardine Dip
[email protected] (Sandy)
Sardine Dip is a traditional dip served at oyster roasts in the lowcountry area around Charleston. It is served with Ritz crackers. The practice is to eat the crackers and dip while the first batch of oysters is roasting, then eat as many oysters as you can, then return to the dip, then the oysters, then the dip, etc.
The "recipe" is:
Cans of sardines (in oil, as many as you need)
Enough mayonnaise to make it of the proper consistency (It should be moderately stiff, to stay on the cracker while the eater wanders around with a beer, talking to others)
Grated onion (to taste)
Powdered mustard (to taste)
Black Pepper (to taste)
Salt (to taste, if needed)
Tabasco (to taste, generally not too much)
Mix the whole mess together, chill if made too far ahead of time, and serve with Ritz crackers.
The proper wine to accompany this dish is ice-cold beer.
The appearance (sort of grey, with little black flecks) sometimes puts newcomers off, but it's actually very good, if served under the proper circumstances - i.e., in semi-darkness around a roasting rig (outdoor brick grill with a heavy piece of sheetiron or boiler plate as the roasting surface), on a cool to cold night, plenty of oysters and beer and people. I've never seen it served with any kinds of crackers except Ritz - any attempts to get upscale or toney with this dish is doomed to failure, as well as well-deserved vengeance wreaked by the food gods.
Leftover dip can be made into sandwiches, but after eating them exhalation will tend to attract cats and repel people.