Hey Jeff,
I agree; with the bigger cephalolpods, be they squid or (the in this country rare) cuttlefish, I like a slow braise either on the stove-top or in the oven, be they either cut up in pieces or stuffed whole. For the sort of preparations such as Cathy's dish above or the one I refer to above, I prefer the
frutti di mare or
marisc(o)s on the small side. In the
fideuejat version or adaptation illustrated above, the squid were fairly small, the shrimp medium to small; the scallops were big sea scallops but I halved each of them into two thinner disks. Either with rice or with pasta, the balance of bite between the seafood and the starch element works better for me if the seafood pieces aren't too big.
*
Hola Rafa,
Yes, as a long time student of things Catalan I am indeed familiar with the dishes you mention. I love dishes like
arròs a banda, where the one cooking process yields a two course meal, in this case, first the rice and then the fish with the potatoes and other vegetables. There are some wonderful analogues in other cuisines, e.g. bouillabaisse.
Regarding broths, yes, a proper fish broth would be more flavourful than the shrimp shell broth I used in my New Year's
fideuejat alla fantasia di Antonio pictured above, but there are various complications involved with such things in a place like Chicago, which is so far from the sea.* The traditional array of
pescados de roca could only be approximated here and would be expensive, something which for our very small household is hard to justify on an occasion when the three of us are eating alone. In that case, I think the shrimp shell stock is really a great alternative that lends a dish a nice round and pleasant seafoody background. Of course, with a little forethought and advanced planning, one could gather some good bits of carcass and freeze them, then make a good batch (and maybe even freeze some of that for a future rainy day).
Bon profit!
Antonius
* Let's not revisit the old bone of contention about the availablility of great seafood in Chicago here. My position is: yes, you can sometimes get very good stuff in various stores, always get very good or excellent stuff in a certain handful of stores, but all in all, the level of quality is lower (and the geneuinely high quality stuff here concommitantly more expensive) than in places where the seafood eating culture has deeper roots, which is to say, places where there were and in some cases still are active fishing industries. If you disagree with that fine but lets go off on that tangent in one of the existing threads.
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.