black bean

grilled shrimp with black bean & mango salad is so good that you'll take photos of it, too!

grilled shrimp with black bean & mango salad is so good that you'll take photos of it, too!

Steven gave me this cookbook long ago called “Miami Spice” by Steven Raichlen (cute TV sort of name, I know!) I think that was back when we lived in Astoria. I never really paid much attention to it because most of the recipes call for the use of fruits: lots of fruits! Don’t misunderstand me! It was a thoughtful gift and all. And I do love to cook and I was unfamiliar with Southern Florida style cooking then. The book is very interesting really. It’s just that normally I don’t go for savory recipes that require fruit. I always feel that they’re too sweet for me. Pineapple doesn’t even excite me for cooking… sorry Hawaiians! :)

Well on second thought, maybe I’m being a little dramatic because tomatoes are fruits and I eat them all the time. Perhaps I’m making a false statement here. Oops another fruit that I eat in savory dishes is avocado. Oh dear, oh my!

Anyhow recently I have been trying to incorporate other fruits into my cooking. This grilled shrimp with black bean and mango salad was adapted from the above book. I‘ve made it twice and people really loved it so I decided, after some arm twisting—I really am fruit biased, to blog it. I served it with my corn sundried tomato salad most recently at a dinner party. It was a huge hit. Just look at some of the guests photographing the platter!

The recipe has been adapted to my taste, here it is:

grilled shrimp, black bean & mango salad

grilled shrimp, black bean & mango salad

Summertime Grilled Shrimp with Black Bean & Mango Salad

Ingredients:
20 large shrimp cleaned, deveined tail on
5 bamboo skewers
16 oz of black beans cooked al dente
Juice of 3-4 limes
½ bunch chopped cilantro
1/3 cup olive oil
6-8 scallions (spring onions) chopped
1/3 of a small jalapeño pepper cut ultra thin
4 medium ripe mangoes diced small
Salt
fresh black Pepper
1 tsp of dried fenugreek leaves
1 tsp ground cumin

How to:

Pre-heat grill to high: 500F or more
Marinate shrimp with 1 tsp of olive oil, salt, pepper, cumin, dried fenugreek leaves and juice of 1 lime about five minutes. Grill shrimp on bamboo skewers for about 2-3 min per side (it will burn a bit- worry not, the smoky flavor is good). Remove from skewers. Just before serving combine beans, mango, scallions, cilantro, lime juice, jalapeño pepper, salt, black pepper and olive oil. Give it a good toss, adjust salt and lime. Scatter warm shrimp over the salad and serve on a platter or individual plates. I prefer family style because it’s less food handling for me and more interaction for my guests. It makes about five servings.

shrimp, black bean and mango salad with roasted corn salad, heirloom cherry tomatoes and basmati rice

shrimp, black bean and mango salad with roasted corn salad, heirloom cherry tomatoes and basmati rice

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DAY 0: a full bag of spinach!

DAY 0: a full bag of spinach!

When we first moved to San Francisco from New York , we joined Costco in a rush of excitement. This is a store that requires a car, something that we didn’t have (or really want) in Queens. Plus the fact of membership helped us during that delicate transition period from one city to another when you don’t quite know enough people in the new town to feel yourselves and you’re still comparing everything to the place left behind. It was comforting to wander the Costco aisles; a place where people are friendly and there’s a carnival like atmosphere that lifts the mood. All the psychological mumbo jumbo aside, Costco just seemed like a good idea at the time.

Since then, we’ve driven by the San Francisco location just before 9:30AM on Saturdays to see huge lines of people, all standing behind those gigantic Costco-style shopping carts, waiting with an agitated sense of anticipation for that magical moment when the doors open. The shop, if you can call such a monstrous semi-public place such a mild name, is remarkable. Aside from the largeness of the warehouse and shopping carts, I’m always struck by the strange lighting, the noise, the long lines and the shoving of the customer/members. And of course, there’s the products themselves to consider.

DAY 1: spinach with pasta

DAY 1: spinach with pasta

They tend to be a bit….oversized, I think, at least for just two people. Maybe if you have a lot of kids, you’re running a restaurant or perhaps feeding a small militia corps, it makes more sense. For just two though, big doesn’t always work out. I’ve found that I can safely buy “dry goods” like tissue paper and cases of Italian sparkling water. I once bought a container of dried shitake mushrooms there and ended up only using a few. The container was physically so large that I couldn’t store it in our smallish kitchen. I found room in the hall closet and promptly forgot about it. When I discovered it a couple years later, it had expired. When we used to eat meat, we’d occasionally buy a platter of pork loin and freeze most of it.That seemed o.k. too.

I’ve struggled most with produce. Those large boxes, crates and bags of fresh fruit and vegetables look so enticing! I have trouble really appreciating their size when I ‘m standing in the middle of the store because everything is so hugely out of proportion. This inevitably leads me to underestimate how much of a given item is in the oversized container. So in the past, we’d buy the stuff, then have way too much at home and it would rot. We didn’t renew our membership because all of this waste began to make us think that it just wasn’t economical for the two of us.

DAY 2: spinach with lemon

DAY 2: spinach with lemon

Recently though, we went with our friend, Jasmine Turner and her husband. We needed more tissue paper and the place is fun to go to occasionally, so why not? On impulse, I bought a bag of spinach that was about the size of the pillow that I sleep on at night. It was pretty cheap, only $3.79. But could we eat it before the deadly rot set in? Here’s how it went:

DAY 1: Sunday

We spent the day celebrating cinco de mayo with Kevin and Kristen. We got home late, still a bit tipsy. Hegui was hungry so while I crashed in front of the TV he made pasta with shaved carrot and spinach, sautéed in olive oil with garlic.

DAY 2: Monday

I was tired from work, so wanted something simple. I sautéed some spinach in garlic and olive oil then added salt and lemon juice. This was served with great northern beans that I cooked with oil, more garlic and salt; rice; canned sardines in chili oil and canned pickled jalapeno peppers. Yummy and spicy, a great combo!

DAY 3: spinach rice

DAY 3: spinach rice

DAY 3: Tuesday

The spinach still looked good! Today I was blogging all afternoon so I wasn’t that creative in the kitchen. I made spinach rice and served it with black beans and oven roasted broccoli with garlic, pepper flakes, olive oil and salt. We tried the 2007 Côtes du Rhône, Domaine de Cristia. Loved the wine! (more about the wine)

DAY 4: Wednesday

This was the end of the spinach marathon. Finally! David came over after his recent trip to Hawaii with Carlos. We caught up over spinach salad dressed with warm olive oil,  lemon juice, red wine vinegar, salt and pepper along with a side of green beans that I blanched then tossed in walnut oil, shallots, and red wine vinegar with a sprinkle of kalamata olives. This was followed by basil pesto pasta with a chocolate treat at the end. The spinach held up well. Only a few leaves needed to be discarded.

DAY 4: spinach salad

DAY 4: spinach salad

It turns out you actually can find good values at warehouse super stores in the produce isle, just so long as you’re willing to eat it every day, relentlessly. Spinach is healthy and tasty, which makes it worth it.

empty spinach bag

empty spinach bag

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