Confession: In our household it's not
the male who is the TV channel flipper. (Besides, he was cooking
dinner.) One night last month I was giving each station three seconds
to convince me there was something worth watching before I cruised up
another notch. That evening I didn't get past 13.
It wasn't the panel of familiar faces
answering phones during KEET's September pledge drive that stopped me.
It was the tail end of a show called "California's Gold."
Host Huell Howser was at the mouth of the Klamath River with two Yurok
men, learning how to properly barbecue salmon. A carved redwood stick
is threaded in and out of the fillet muscle without breaking through
the salmon skin. The end of each stake is then pounded into the sand
facing a roaring fire purposefully built up against the boulders to
reflect the heat. I was just beginning to salivate (maybe it was the
cooking odors from the next room) when one man bent over, grabbed a
slimy black eel and tossed it on the scorching rocks in the fire.
Right: "The caterpillar"
is a special order sushi at The Ritz.
Barbecued eel. Yum! I was instantly
transported back to springtime in Sardinia. For our 40th anniversary
this year, my husband and I rented an apartment in Alghero, a fishing
and tourist city the size of Eureka, on Sardinia's northwest coast. In
the mornings after cappuccino, we took Italian language lessons. The
rest
of the time we read, swam, explored on bicycles, shopped and immersed
ourselves in the local culture -- but most importantly, we ate very
well every day. It was a joy to find a new deli or family-run
restaurant and it was equally a pleasure to shop at the daily
vegetable market and then cross the street to see what all the fish
vendors had each day. (The wine of the region is also wonderful and
inexpensive.)
One weekend we traveled by train to
Sassarai, one of the largest cities on the island. In May, there is an
annual festival and parade with people in beautiful costumes singing,
dancing and carrying food of their regions to show off. After the
parade, there was a street fair throughout the downtown with food
booths. In fact, one entire block on both sides held just barbecue
vendors with an infinite variety of the freshest fish and stuffed
sausages and pig and chicken and -- O.K. -- horsemeat, a Sardinian
specialty. That's where I saw one merchant coiling live eels into
cinnamon bun shapes, shoving the skewers through them and plopping
them on the fire with tails and heads still flailing.
Left: Unagi "don," or bowl
of smoked eel topped with crispy skin.
I passed on the delicacy that day only
because I was already stuffed and had a long hike back to the train
station, but judging from the enthusiastic crowds, the barbecued eels
were a hit.
We've lived on the North Coast for
almost 35 years yet I had never known Native Americans also consider
barbecued eel a delicacy.
"They taste great," said
Andre Cramblit, a Karuk who works for the Northern California Indian
Development Council in Eureka. "They're rich, fatty, crisp on the
outside. We throw the heads back in to crisp them up, but only the men
get to eat them. Last year my nephew -- he's 2 -- walked around
sucking on the head until there was nothing left but a ring of
teeth."
I told him I loved smoked eel, too. In
fact it's on one of my favorite sushis at The Ritz in Old Town Eureka.
Chef Machan (his real name is Mashuri, born in Indonesia and trained
in Japan) makes something not on the regular menu called "The
Caterpillar." It is a California roll (cucumber, avocado and
shrimp) draped with more ripe avocado, hot barbecued eel and drizzled
with a sweetish soy sauce.
Hold on, Cramblit warned. Japanese
freshwater eels (called unagi) and the European eels we
encountered in Sardinia are real eels. "They have bones and a
jaw," he said.
What
we call eels on the West Coast are really lampreys, "ancient
jawless fish that superficially resemble eels, but are not
related," according to the Center for Biological Diversity
website. Wikipedia gets even more graphic: "A lamprey is a
jawless fish with a toothed, funnel-like sucking mouth, with which
most species bore into the flesh of the other fish to suck their
blood. In zoology, lampreys are often not considered to be true fish
because of their vastly different morphology and physiology."
"I love eels," said Samantha
Sylvia, who works in administration at the Yurok Headquarters in
Klamath. (Of course, she means "lampreys.")
"My dad is very well known for
eeling. He is so fast. He's an expert. He takes a knife and fork and
cleans them, and rips the cord out. ... It only takes a few minutes
and he flattens them out to cook. Everyone comes to him for
advice."
Historic eel fishing by wooden hook
near
the mouth of the Klamath. Photo by Irenia Quitquit.
Sylvia's dad -- Eugene Coleman, a Karuk
from Orleans -- uses traditional eel baskets to gather eels in deep
holes in the upper Klamath River. Her boyfriend, she said, uses hooks
to snag the critters and then throws them up on land to a partner to
bag in a gunny sack.
"He carves his hooks out of wood
that he decorates with Indian designs," she said.
Claire Reynolds, director of community
outreach for KEET-TV, said beginning Sunday, Nov. 19, the station will
begin airing a new five-part series called "Seasoned with
Spirit."
"It's a culinary celebration of
America's bounty combining Native American history and culture with
delicious, healthy recipes inspired by indigenous foods," she
said. The series -- hosted by Barrett Oden, a renowned Native American
chef, food historian and lecturer from the Potawatomi Nation -- has
one episode that I'll be sure to watch, Nov. 26 at 7:30 and 11:30
p.m., titled "Bounty of the River's Edge," featuring the
Yurok tribe.
The menu for the show includes "alderwood
smoked salmon, dried sirfish and eels, along with an amazing sturgeon
egg (caviar) bread."
Yum.
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Source: http://www.northcoastjournal.com/101206/food1012.html