Trendinista: Foodies’ latest find: tinned fish
Sushi joints and raw bars still rule, but some serious eaters now get their kicks from cans
October 24, 2016
Finally, a foodie-driven trend any restaurant can adopt overnight: tinned fish.
We’re not talking about the commodity kind found on U.S. grocery stores shelves, but artisan-caliber fare imported from Europe. A handful of pioneering restaurants already offer these delicacies on carefully curated lists; given the category’s microscopically low barrier to entry, other operators could soon follow suit.
What’s making imported tinned product such a big deal? We’ll let Nialls Fallon and Gareth Maccubbin, whose New York City restaurant Maiden Lane began serving it in 2013, explain.
“The European tinned seafood we source is from smaller boutique canneries that work with fisherman who sustainably catch in season,” they say. “Everything is hand-cleaned and hand-packed with high-quality olive oil, vinegar, vegetables, and herbs, and there are no other preservatives, unlike the American versions which are overwhelmingly part of the industrial food chain.”
How’s it taste? “It’s the difference between canning hothouse tomatoes in January and canning heirloom tomatoes in August,” they argue. “In-season is fresh, ripe, delicious and worth preserving. The alternative is lifeless.”
The 38-item “Tins” section of Maiden Lane