Tom Douglas quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • My favorite way to cook trout is whole, bone-in, on the grill. The fish are stuffed with sliced lemons and herb sprigs, brushed with oil, and cooked over fairly hot coals until the skin is crisp and the flesh is moist and flaky. Go ahead and gild the lily by adding a sauce.

  • Tender and sweet, Manila clams partner well with a wide variety of foods - white wine, sake, beer, butter, leeks, fresh herbs, roasted peppers, olives, and wild mushrooms, to name a few.

  • Alaska Airlines and I have a lot in common, so coming together to delight travelers with savory, high quality food from the Pacific Northwest made sense.

  • Utrip makes it easy for travelers to experience the destination highlights that most interest them, be it food, art or history. Just like a culinary experience, every palate is different, and Utrip is all about personalizing travel for their users.

  • For a group of friends or a family dinner, fish tacos are popular and fun to make.

  • Some versions of crab cakes are mostly crabmeat lightly bound with egg, but I'm a firm believer that a crab cake should contain bread crumbs.

  • When I was a kid and my mom made tomato soup, she would cut buttered toast into squares and float them on top of each bowl.

  • To shuck oysters, you'll need an oyster knife, a handy tool with a sturdy handle and a short, rigid blade which you can pick up for about ten bucks in a kitchenware shop or fish market. A quick trip online will yield any number of videos and slide shows with step-by-step instructions on how to shuck an oyster.

  • The classic Italian green sauce, salsa verde, is easy to make and especially nice in the spring when bunches of fresh herbs start appearing in the farmers market or in your garden.

  • Every time you make a fruit crisp for me, you are my favorite person in the world. It's something delicious and warm, right out of the oven. I mean, what more could anyone want? And all you're doing is taking the best fruit of the season, putting a crumb topping on it and putting it in the oven.

  • The best meal I was served was ribollita, an Italian bread soup at the Castello di Ama winery in Tuscany. I usually hate ribollita, and the people I was traveling with thought I was crazy for ordering it.

  • My own favorite way to cook and eat razor clams is to simply dredge them in a mix of seasoned flour and cornmeal, then pan fry them in butter until crisp and golden. Be careful not to overcook them so they stay tender, not tough and chewy.

  • When I was young, I would make my parents breakfast in bed on Saturday mornings.

  • Thanks to the abundance of shellfish in Puget Sound, Washington State is the largest oyster producer in the country.

  • The flesh of king salmon, which varies in color from white to pink to red, has a high fat content, making it perfect for grilling.

  • It's always a good idea to chill your crab cake mixture for a few hours, or even overnight, before frying because they'll hold together better.

  • I use ginger like garlic. I love it for steaming fish and making barbecue sauces or roasted chicken.

  • Around the time I opened my second restaurant, Etta's, I had just finished judging at the Jack Daniels World Invitational BBQ Championship in Lynchburg, Tennessee. Back home in Seattle, my goal was to recreate the sweet and smoky taste of that BBQ using our local wild king salmon instead of pig.

  • It's hard to legislate what people eat. People are getting fed up with being told what they can and can't do. It boils down to personal responsibility. People need to read labels, do their research and act accordingly.

  • Every chef has his treats. By that, I mean bits and pieces from things you're working on - crusty little cake trimmings, ends from a brisket, collars from a salmon, scraps. But they're snacks to me, and I eat them right off the cutting board - maybe too much.

  • Who doesn't love digging into a plate of crab cakes or going after a chilled cracked crab with crab cracker, cocktail fork and a plastic bib for protection?

  • My wife and I decided to try and kick start our kitchens to a $15 minimum wage for cooks. I've probably had to go through and raise every menu price now by 50 cents because it took away my profit. I just underestimated what it was going to cost.

  • Most of the catfish you find at the fish counter has been farmed. Though I usually prefer to buy and eat wild fish, farmed catfish taste cleaner, without the muddy taste of their wild relatives.

  • While it's typical to find steamed clam recipes which include a bit of bacon or sausage, you might not think of adding shredded ham hock, but it's another way to pair the lusty, smoky flavor of animal fat with the briny ocean flavor of shellfish.

  • There's something majestic about a 30-pound Chinook salmon roasted and served whole - people get excited when you present it with the head and tail on. It has beautifully browned skin and extraordinary bright red flesh when you cut into it.

  • I particularly like to make crunchy slices of garlic bread to serve with steamed clams.

  • I'm a compassionate person, so if a product is 15 percent more than what I typically pay, and I see the purpose, I'll foster that kind of sustainability for the farmers/fishers.

  • I think that people need to stand up with their backbone and not go to places where they feel like the workers aren't taken care of.

  • Ling cod is a mild-flavored and somewhat delicate fish that takes well to poaching, braising and pan-roasting.

  • One-pot meals make a lot of sense... because so much of what people hate about cooking is really the cleanup, the mess, the grease.

  • Another way I like to barbecue king salmon is as a whole fish stuffed, literally to the gills, with sweet onions, sliced lemons, and summer sage.

  • I have an affinity for the old Seattle coffee shops, places like the Green Onion and the Copper Kettle, the classic kind of coffee bar - little places that served breakfast, lunch and dinner and have pretty much disappeared.

  • If you don't have the confidence in baking, commit to making the recipe three times. The first two, do it exactly the way I've told you to make it. Twice. The first time you'll screw it up. The second time it will come out pretty good, and then the third time, make your adjustments.

  • Disappointing cakes have often been sitting out too long. They should last just long enough to have the last pieces the next morning with coffee - who doesn't love cake with coffee?

  • I have a good flavor memory.

  • I don't answer my phone in a restaurant.

  • We've become such a restaurant society.

  • Often we eat squid fried, so it's fun to grill it for a change. To grill squid, slice the cleaned bodies open into two flat pieces and thread them, along with the tentacles, onto skewers, then grill quickly over a direct fire with the coals as close as possible to the grate, turning the squid several times.

  • I can't stand it when restaurants don't have a sense of place in a city. When I'm in London, I want to know I'm in London. When you're sitting in my joint, you know you're sitting in Seattle.

  • When I eat oatmeal, I'm hungry by 10 A.M., but pho is a great way to start the day.

  • After being cooked, ling cod tends to bleed out some moisture, so, before serving, let it rest a few moments on a plate. Once the moisture has been released, you can carefully pick up the fillet with a slotted spatula and transfer it to another plate for saucing. This way, you won't sog out your beautiful sauce.

  • I love being able to help promote Seattle to travelers worldwide.

  • Support a small chef. Not these big chains... but support the people who are out there trying to do things right and working hard to do that.

  • The one thing I could do with my eyes closed is my Grandma's schnecken.

  • I would say a full-time waiter in a high-price house could easily make $75,000, $80,000 a year.

  • I didn't go to university. I didn't go to culinary school, barely made it through high school.

  • When I wrote my cookbook, 'I Love Crab Cakes,' I asked some of my best chef buddies to contribute recipes.

  • I love restaurants from top to bottom.

  • I was once made honorary mayor of my hometown of Newark, Del.

  • Catfish's mild taste adapts well to a wide array of flavors, especially strong assertive ones, which is why you used to see it 'blackened' Cajun style on so many restaurant menus - a trick which soon became a tired cliche.

  • There's natural mentoring that goes on in my life every day.

  • Cooks are an undervalued, awesome profession.

  • A chunk of seared albacore tuna, salted and peppered, then seared rare in a little oil in a hot skillet for just a minute or so per side, is the perfect addition to a savory plate of fried rice. Just slice the tuna across the grain and fan those mild, meaty slices over the top of the rice.

  • Albacore tuna has a mild flavor that's delicious served raw or seared briefly on the outside so that it's still rare on the inside.

  • Salsa verde is delicious with trout or most any fish.

  • It's really fun to have a convection oven, even it if it's a little convection toaster oven. It really changes the way you bake.

  • Spanish chorizo is a spicy cured sausage that's especially tasty with clams.

  • In the restaurant business, there's the concept of pivot. Pivot to the stove, pivot to the refrigerator.

  • Razor clams are large, oblong clams, although not as big as geoducks.

  • It's important that your shucked oyster is clean and pristine.

  • Pork is my friend.

  • One of my favorite ways to eat albacore is tuna poke.

  • Farm to table is a personal choice.

  • It's just an American tradition to make sure people don't leave hungry. The worst thing is to have them say, 'Great dinner, but now I have to go get a burger.'

  • The two things that are going to make you a better baker without even trying are a scale and a thermometer in your oven.

  • There's a restaurant in Manhattan called Balthazar, and next to it is Balthazar Bakery. It's tiny, and it's very charming to have that little retail outlet to sell the house desserts and breads.

  • I want to do the basic things, like putting my daughter to bed. It's the sweetest thing.

  • Summer in Seattle allows me to indulge in some of the region's top culinary delights - I'm talking about wild king salmon and fresh, ripe Washington stone fruits and berries like cherries, peaches, plums, and blueberries.

  • Catfish has a nice firm texture and mild flavor.

  • If deep-frying catfish, try a dredge of seasoned flour and cornmeal and add some bacon fat to the oil.

  • Over the years I've tweaked my stuffing recipe many times, adding a variety of ingredients like sauteed wild mushrooms, dried cherries, fresh chevre, toasted hazelnuts, chopped ham hock meat, and other taste treats.

  • Sweet Washington cherries and Walla Walla onions are two of my favorite local treats.

  • In some cities, McDonald's rules, but Seattle is ruled by teriyaki joints.

  • I pay a living wage, I believe in healthcare, I declare all my income, and I don't cut corners.

  • My longtime friend Steven Steinbock, who has worked with me for more than thirty years, is a master at panfrying fish and seafood.

  • Money is like manure: if you don't spread it around, nothing grows.

  • In my 'Big Dinners' cookbook, I recreated my mother's recipe for crab dip. The creamy dressing for this dip, made with mayonnaise, tomato paste, a touch of honey, sliced chives, lemon juice and zest, horseradish and Tabasco, is reminiscent of Thousand Island dressing.

  • Sweet, delicious Dungeness crab is always a treat.

  • The simplest way to prepare Dungeness crabs is to boil them in the shell and set them in front of your guests with crab crackers or crab hammers, cocktail forks, and plenty of napkins.

  • I think you owe it to your kids to teach them how to cook - you know, self-survival.

  • At the fishmonger, choose fish with bright scales and clear eyes.

  • I think about sustainability all the time, whether it's with fish or farmers in Eastern Oregon.

  • Mastering one recipe is better than mastering too many. Learn something and own it, and you'll feel so much better about it. You'll have more confidence if you've made it five times, and that confidence adds so much fun to cooking.

  • The key to great fried squid is 'flash-frying' in hot oil for only a few minutes, which keeps it tender.

  • Cooking with your kids is a remarkable exercise to let them in on the purchasing part of the process - kids love to shop, and its great to take them to these ethnic places where people don't always speak the language.

  • My dad never explained anything growing up.

  • I can't believe how many people don't have time to cook but have time to watch football and 'The Voice.' They're certainly making a choice.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share