Portsmouth Herald

Irish cuisine goes well beyond meat and potatoes

- Albert Stumm Wash and scrub the mussels,

It may come as a surprise that one of Ireland’s most renowned chefs opened a Spanish tapas place for his first restaurant in Galway. That was 2008, though, a time when Jp McMahon saw – and felt – a lack of confidence in Irish cuisine.

“We had kind of a sense of looking outward,” McMahon said. “We’ve always had good products but haven’t always been able to graft them into a cuisine per se in the way Spanish or Italians did.”

His mind began to change while working with local producers who had doubled down on their roots, and he started investigat­ing Irish food and its history.

The research led him to open Aniar, a contempora­ry restaurant that combines traditiona­l cooking and preservati­on methods, such as curing, pickling, smoking and fermenting, with fresh local ingredient­s, in innovative ways. Aniar earned a Michelin star in 2013.

The restaurant helped to dispel the misconcept­ion that Irish food is only stews, meat pies and potatoes.

“Certainly, there’s great shellfish, oysters, beef and lamb and dairy,” said McMahon, whose “The Irish Cookbook” falls somewhere between a collection of recipes and a hefty culinary history. “It turns out serving shellfish with pickles or ferments is just as much Irish food as beef and Guinness pie is.”

Local seaweed, for instance, was used historical­ly as a vegetable and a seasoning, much like in Japan. And seafood in general has taken a bigger piece of center stage in recent years.

When Imen McDonnell moved to Ireland from Minneapoli­s to be with her now-husband in 2005, she says she was amazed at how little seafood was being eaten by locals. Because observant Catholics had to eat fish on Fridays and during Lent, people were either sick of seafood or felt like it was poor people’s food, she said.

“Eventually, people started looking around seeing we have everything we need right here,” said McDonnell, author of “The Farmette Cookbook: Recipes and Adventures from My Life on an Irish Farm.”

“The nicest food here is things simply prepared fresh off the land,” she said.

Her creamy seafood chowder is a typical Irish dish that breaks the meat-andpotatoe­s stereotype, although it does include a potato, which locals unabashedl­y continue to love. Try the simplified version below, paired with McMahon’s stout and treacle soda bread that he serves in Aniar. discarding any that are already open. In a large pot, bring the wine to a simmer, add the mussels and cook covered until they all pop open, about 3 to 5 minutes. Transfer to a bowl with the liquid. Melt 1 tablespoon of the butter over low heat, add 1 teaspoon salt and cook the vegetables until translucen­t, about 10 minutes.

In a small saucepan, stir together the remaining butter and flour over low to form a roux. In another saucepan, bring the cream, milk and stock to boiling. Whisk the roux into the cream mixture and bring back to a simmer, stirring continuous­ly.

When the vegetables are cooked, add the fish, followed by the thickened cream and stock mixture and the cooked mussels. Bring the soup to a simmer for 5 minutes. Season to taste with salt and pepper. flour, such as Bob’s Red Mill or King Arthur

200 g/11⁄2 cups white bread flour 1 tablespoon baking soda

4 teaspoons sea salt

11⁄2 cups mixed seeds, such as pumpkin or sunflower

⁄3 cup treacle or molasses

2

2 eggs

850 ml/31⁄2 cups buttermilk About 200 ml/1 cup stout such as Guinness

50 g/1⁄3 cup) steel-cut oats, for the topping

to 265°F. Grease two 9×5×3-inch loaf pans. In a large mixing bowl, stir all dry ingredient­s except the oats together. In a small bowl, mix the treacle (molasses), eggs and buttermilk, then add the mixture to the dry ingredient­s and combine. Mix in enough stout until you achieve a wet, pourable batter. Do not knead. Pour the batter into the prepared pans, sprinkle the oats on top, and bake for 1 hour 30 minutes to 1 hour 45 minutes, until the loaves sound hollow when the bottoms are tapped or the core temperatur­e is greater than 185°F on a meat thermomete­r.

Preheat the oven

 ?? PROVIDED BY IMEN MCDONNELL VIA AP ?? This recipe for creamy seafood chowder is featured in Imen McDonnell’s “The Farmette Cookbook: Recipes and Adventures from My Life on an Irish Farm.”
PROVIDED BY IMEN MCDONNELL VIA AP This recipe for creamy seafood chowder is featured in Imen McDonnell’s “The Farmette Cookbook: Recipes and Adventures from My Life on an Irish Farm.”
 ?? PROVIDED BY ANITA MURPHY VIA AP ?? This Irish soda from chef Jp McMahon’s “The Irish Cookbook” is made with with stout beer and treacle.
PROVIDED BY ANITA MURPHY VIA AP This Irish soda from chef Jp McMahon’s “The Irish Cookbook” is made with with stout beer and treacle.

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