Call & Times

REMEMBER TUNA MELT

- Kate Krader

American home kitchens are in an unpreceden­ted moment, where the most pedestrian supermarke­t staples can be as valuable as finicky homemade products. A household’s most prized possession­s can include a jar of sourdough starter just as easily as a can of Chef Boyardee Spaghettio­s.

Which makes this the perfect time to celebrate the tuna melt, one of the most supermarke­t-driven of sandwiches. It’s made from canned tuna, mayonnaise, and sliced cheese from the dairy aisle-not dependent on decent produce, like, say, a BLT. What makes it shine now is the increasing availabili­ty of high-quality tinned fish.

The dish has been having a bit of a moment since March 1. According to a Reddit spokespers­on, there’s been an increase of over 30% in mentions of tuna melts across the platform, which includes an 18.7 million-member food community, compared with the same time period in 2019. Canned tuna references were also up more than 60% across Reddit.

Coincident­ally, the sandwich is a highlight of the new The Tinned Fish Cookbook: Easy-to-Make Meals From Ocean to Plate by Bart van Olphen (The Experiment; $19). Van Olphen was once a chef at the 2-Michelin-star restaurant Lucas Carton in Paris. He’s gone on to become a passionate sustainabl­e seafood advocate: He advises British food star Jamie Oliver on the subject and has written cookbooks in both English and his native Dutch. In his 2010 award-winning Fish Tales, he chronicles stories and recipes from sustainabl­e fisheries around the world.

His new book includes 45 recipes for different kinds of canned and tinned seafood, from anchovies and sardines to less convention­al options such as mackerel. “Tinned seafood is considered secondary to fresh. But people should think of it as a way of preserving-that’s a technique that’s so popular now and leaves you with a fantastic product,” says van Olphen. He, of course, advises buying sustainabl­y harvested tinned fish, especially for tuna, which is heavily overfished. Pole- and line-caught is especially good.

Van Olphen has a soft spot for the tuna melt, which combines creamy tuna salad with melty cheese within the crunchines­s of fried bread. He notes you can substitute your favorite cheese for cheddar and even use a thick layer of salty grated Parmesan. But it’s hard to argue with a cheese that melts all over the tuna salad as it toasts in the skillet. (He also says you can switch out the canned fish in the sandwich, but who would want

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