Fishing For Celebrated Copper River Salmon

Orca Inlet in Cordova

CORDOVA, Alaska – In this misty, mountain-flanked town, there are no traffic lights, there is no movie theater, and there is only one produce delivery by plane a week for the handful of restaurants, where a vegetarian omelet is, understandably, “a mix of what we have left at the time.”

There are no roads in or out. The only way to get here is by boat or plane. And in the summer, when the sun shines brightly, you’ll need the Ray-Bans 24-7, as it never sets.

This is Cordova, population 2,000 – on a good day, as one local joked. It’s a place where the high school graduating class is all of 40 students; and the liquor store, which has an espresso bar in it, is owned by the same woman who operates the Bible store next door. This small fishing village sits in South Central Alaska on the Orca Inlet in Prince William Sound. And it is renowned as the home of the famed Copper River salmon, and to some of the hardest working fishermen around.

That’s why I am here after three plane rides and nearly 10 hours of traveling from San Jose last week. Along with a couple of other food writers and chefs from around the country, I was invited by the Copper River/Prince William Sound Marketing Association (funded by the local fishermen) to get a first-hand look at the fishing industry here.

Pink salmon

Salmon is revered in these parts. Indeed, Alaska is the only state in the nation in which salmon is protected in the state constitution.Â

Four canneries operate here, cleaning, gutting, smoking and flash-freezing fresh salmon to be shipped all over the world. Everyone you meet here is or was, or is related to a fisherman. Surprisingly, a good number who fish are in their 20s — sons and daughters of fishermen who followed their parents and grand-parents into this difficult line of work.

Each year, about 500 licensed commercial boats fish for Chinook, Coho, Sockeye and other salmon varieties that migrate up river from saltwater to the Gulf of Alaska to spawn in streams feeding the Copper River. Looking like the foam skimmed off the top of a mug of cocoa, the Copper River is one of the siltiest on Earth. It deposits 214 billion pounds of silt annually.

View of silty the Copper River from a float plane

Fishermen catch the salmon after the fish have fattened up, but before they make the arduous upriver swim. That’s what makes Copper River salmon so prized – its rich, velvety, super lush flesh. It is the way salmon should taste. Read more



An Odiferous Time in Gilroy

Smell that pungent, mouth-watering aroma?

You will as the day draws nearer for the 30th anniversary of the Gilroy Garlic Festival, July 25-27 at Christmas Hill Park in Gilroy.

Over the years, the popular event has raised nearly $8 million for local charities. And it’s fed quite a crowd _ more than 3 million, who have consumed 376 tons of beef, 119 tons of pasta, 68 tons of scampi, 50 tons of calamari, and 72 tons of California garlic.

This year will be more of the same as booths will dish out all things garlic, including garlic frog legs, garlic Kettlekorn, Cajun fried catfish, garlic chicken pizza, lumpia, garlic fried-green tomatoes, and of course, the ever popular, garlic ice cream.

July 26 at 10 a.m., eight amateur cooks from across the country will duke it out in the annual cook-off. This year’s local contestant is Linda Wang of Sunnyvale, who will be trying to sway the judges with her garlic corn creme brulee with pan-seared scallops and garlic pancetta saute. For the first time, the cook-off will be telecast over the Internet on the festival’s Web site.

July 27 at noon, the professionals get in on the act when four area chefs will vie for a top prize of $5,000 and 1,000 pounds of fresh garlic. This “Garlic Showdown” will feature chefs Mark Ayers of the Highlands Inn and Hyatt Regency Monterey; Christopher Preyale of the Fountaingrove Golf & Athletic Club in Santa Rosa; James Waller of the Monterey Plaza Hotel & Spa; and Ryan Scott of San Francisco’s Mission Beach Cafe and a contestant in this past season’s “Top Chef” show. This “Iron Chef”-style challenge will feature a not-so-secret ingredient — garlic, of course.

Tickets to the festival are $12 for adults, $6 for children ages 6-12 and for seniors, and free for kids under age 6.

For those who want to bring a part of the festival home — well, besides the resulting garlic breath — pick up a copy of “Any Bozo Can Cook,”  a collection of 102 recipes inspired by everyone’s fave smelly bulb. It was written by Sam Bozzo and Gene Sakahara, both festival cooks and former festival presidents. The $16 book will be sold at the festival, and online.

For a sneak taste, try this recipe from the book:

Garlic shrimp with spicy garlic peanut sauce

Read more




Taste of Terroir in Livermore

What do you get when you put 16 of Livermore’s top wineries with 16 top Bay Area chefs? You get “Taste of Terroir,” the sixth annual wine and food experience, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. July 24 at the Palm Event Center at Ruby Hill in Pleasanton.

The chefs and vintners will be creating food and wine pairings that will vie for “Most Innovative Pairing,” “Best Expression of Local Ingredients,” and “Judges’ Best” awards. Guests also will have a chance to vote for the “People’s Choice” award. Afterwards, guests will enjoy desserts paired with Livermore Valley ports.

Participating wineries include Concannon Vineyard, Steven Kent Winery, and Page Mill Winery. Restaurants include Scott’s Seafood, Maholo Grille, and the Restaurant at Wente Vineyards.

Tickets are $75 per person.  They are available here or by calling the Livermore Valley Winegrowers Association at (925) 447-WINE.

Two New Bay Area Restaurants Coming In August

Long-time San Franciscans might remember the popular Miss Pearl’s Jam House that was in the Phoenix Hotel back in 1989. Now, it’s being resurrected across the Bay in the Waterfront Hotel in Jack London Square.

The restaurant, expected to open in mid-August, will serve up New World Island cuisine such as crispy catfish fingers, black-eye pea fritters, gazpacho, and selections from a raw bar. There also will be killer cocktails, as well as the infamous Jell-O shots.

Joey Altman, the star of KRON’s “Bay Cafe,” was the chef who launched the original Miss Pearl’s Jam House. He’s back as a consultant on this new project. The executive chef will be Robert Barker, who was executive sous chef at Emeril’s  in New Orleans, and was a chef at three Wolfgang Puck restaurants.

Also expected to open in August in downtown San Francisco is Urban Tavern, a new restaurant owned by restaurateur Chris Condy and Aqua‘s celebrated chef Laurent Manriqe. Also working on the project is Dona Scala, owner of the ever-popular Bistro Don Giovanni in Napa.

Billed as a stylish “gastropub,” Urban Tavern will have a modern, artsy feel with a full-size horse sculpture fashioned out of tractor, motorcycle and car parts. The food will be Mediterranean-inspired.

A Profile of Chef Daniel Sudar of Red Lantern in Redwood City

Daniel Sudar cooking in his San Francisco condo

Get to know Chef Daniel Sudar in my story on “Chef’s Night In” in today’s San Francisco Chronicle food section.

Sudar is the multi-talented, multi-faceted chef of Red Lantern, who also makes his own jewelry, does fashion photography, and designs clothing, including the French-cuffed shirt he’s wearing in this photo above. Learn how to make his version of gado gado, a traditional salad from his homeland of Indonesia.

Gaoo gado, an Indonesian salad of contrasting textures and flavors

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