Cooking the Unthinkable: Sea Urchin
Cooking the Unthinkable is a series that examines some of the more eccentric ingredients. Whether you are a fan of the bizarre or are preparing for the eminent collapse of Western society this series will help you better stomach weird food.
If you believe that cooking has to include some application of heat then you may not agree that sea urchin is something you “cook” with as it is almost always eaten raw. Well, loosen up, dude. Gosh!
Wikipedia describes a sea urchin as, “small, spiny, globular animals which, with their close kin, such as sand dollars, constitute the class Echinoidea of the echinoderm phylum. They inhabit all oceans. Their shell, or “test”, is round and spiny, typically from 3 to 10 centimetres (1.2 to 3.9 in) across. Common colors include black and dull shades of green, olive, brown, purple, and red. They move slowly, feeding mostly on algae. Sea otters, wolf eels, triggerfish, and other predators feed on them. Humans harvest them and serve their roe as a delicacy.”
Uni or sea urchin roe (technically their gonads) is growing in popularity in American sushi bars. It’s a Red Badge of Courage ingredient among those who seek to put a little adventure into their lives. Count me into that group. Recently I was on the West Coast and decided I would take the Uni plunge.
I saddled up to the sushi bar at Kabuki on Vine St. in Hollywood armed with a gift card courtesy of Susan Irby (aka the Bikini Chef). I boldly ordered two Hamachi Toro (Yellow Fin tuna belly) rolls and two Uni rolls along with a sake cocktail. A bit sparse I know but it was after all breakfast. The Hamachi Toro was amazing, simply amazing.
The Uni was an experience in texture. The taste was mildly seafoodie while not overpowering with the distinct after taste of gray matter. Anyone who has tried animal brains knows what I am talking about. The bitterness is brief and can easily be covered up with a proper use of wasabi. I liked it. But the texture was very strange. It was incredibly smooth almost like a soft custard pudding or pudding only fish flavored. That’s it! Uni is fish pudding.
Would I eat it again? Sure but I prefer Toro or salmon skin rolls. Salmon skin rolls will change your life.
ICA: Symon vs. Okuwa
An amazing match-up for this 4th of July. This week’s challenger is Chef Makoto Okuwa who ventures into the unfriendly confines of Kitchen Stadium to take on Iron Chef Michael Symon. Now generally Kitchen Stadium is a place of intimidation for a challenger but not for Okuwa-San, he ran the sushi bar at Morimoto, New York having spent years as a sous chef of Iron Chef Morimoto including 13 battles with the dean of Iron Chefs.
Chef Makoto began his career in Japan at the age of 15. After years of perfecting his art he immigrated to the US where he worked at the famed Washington DC sushi bar, Sushi Taro. It was while working in the nation’s capital that he first caught the eye of Iron Chef Morimoto who soon recruited the young chef to join him at the Morimoto flagship in Philadelphia. When his mentor opened his second restaurant in New York’s Meatpacking District he tapped Okuwa to oversee the sushi menu.
Today Makoto-San balances the traditions of Japanese cuisine with the sophistication and flash demanded from American diners at his own restaurant Sashi in Manhattan Beach, California. It is at Sashi where the apprentice has become master and asserted his independence by asking himself each morning, “What’s possible?” This Independence Day he collides head first with the bold new American flavors of Iron Chef Michael Symon. This battle has all the trappings of a culinary Rube Goldberg Machine. The episode airs tonight at 10pm/9c.
The judges for Battle: Uni (sea urchin) are Nina Griscom, Sam Haskell and Tia Carrere.
Click HERE for the outcome.
ICA: Symon vs. Okuwa – Outcome
SPOILER ALERT: The following information is the outcome of Symon vs. Okuwa. If you want information on the combatants click HERE. If you are only interested in the outcome read on.
Judges for Battle: Uni (sea urchin) were Nina Griscom, Sam Haskell and Tia Carrere.
Symon Okuwa
Taste: 30 Taste: 19
Plating: 13 Plating: 12
Originality: 13 Originality: 12
Total: 56 Total: 43
If you haven’t yet, check out my exclusive interview with Iron Chef Michael Symon.
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