Green Fig and Lionfish. Allen Susser
Acknowledgments
About the Author
The story of the lionfish, like all good fish tales, is growing greater each day. These flamboyantly colorful fish with their diverse markings were originally bred in the Indian Ocean. But legend has it that they found their way over to us in the Caribbean when Hurricane Andrew liberated a handful of them from the aquariums of drug lords living in Florida.
Since then, lionfish have bred prolifically in a ceaseless invasion of our seas from Florida to the West Indies. They thrive in the warm waters of the Atlantic and Caribbean and wreak havoc on our ocean ecosystems and fisheries, gobbling up reef fish, juvenile snapper, and grouper. With no known predators to stop them, the lionfish are more threatening than they are beautiful. Not only are they dangerous to fragile ecosystems, they can also inflict an extremely painful sting on humans. Therefore, we need to jump in and put these delicious fish on our dinner plates.
My first encounter with lionfish was at Anse Chastanet in Saint Lucia, where I am the consulting chef for both Anse Chastanet Resort and Jade Mountain. One of the local divers brought in a handful of lionfish from his morning’s catch. We purchase all our fish from local fisherman and usually get our lobster from the divers. This diver was complaining about how these little monsters were eating everything on the reef and destroying the lobster grounds. Would we buy lionfish from him, too?
I had heard of lionfish and was even aware that they were spreading rapidly into the Caribbean. I understood the problems they were causing and, at the same time, was very curious to taste this little creature. And here they were, six of them dangling in front of me, practically dripping with seawater. My chef’s inquisitiveness had gotten the better of me: love at first bite. I was encouraged and enthusiastic. The experience stoked my quest for delicious tasting local sustainable ingredients. And that quest has evolved into this cookbook.
One challenge: catching these things isn’t so easy. Lionfish don’t go for baited hooks, don’t school together, and are well camouflaged against the reefs they populate. Divers spear or net each fish, bringing ashore their bounty in a celebration of sustainability. While lionfish haven’t often appeared on menus in the Caribbean, more restaurants and fishmongers on many islands are beginning to introduce the fish as well as its story as the fish becomes more prevalent in these waters. In Saint Lucia, lionfish are becoming a local commodity. You can find them early mornings in the fish market in town.
You will find this seasonal lionfish cookbook a practical guide to cooking fish. Lionfish fillets are dense, with an elastic bite; a sweet, briny flavor; and just a hint of buttery richness. I like to use lionfish in dishes such as ceviche or simply sautéed with cilantro, garlic, and lime. Delicious grilled, sautéed, or stewed, it’s a near perfect stand-in for many recipes likely in your repertoire already. The key to fish cookery is keeping it fresh and simple. The fresher the fish, the brighter and more honest the flavor. My instinct is to let flavor come through clearly with these simple recipes.
With all due respect for the people of Saint Lucia, I have borrowed the name of this book, Green Fig and Lionfish, from the essence of their namesake, the national dish Green Fig and Saltfish. True to the history of Saint Lucia, mature green bananas are called green figs and play a vital role in daily local cooking. Taking a leap here, I have swapped lionfish for the saltfish that is usually in the pot. I endeavor to not alter the character of the ingredients but to enable them to embody the soulful essence of the Caribbean.
Seasonal Caribbean
Most people think of the Caribbean as being synonymous with year-round summer. They do not think of it as a place that has seasons, but it does; it has a rhythm of its own. There is a dry season that links winter to spring and a wet season that carries summer through to the fall.
Seasons in the Caribbean influence daily life. That is because most of the food eaten day-to-day by locals is grown on an island. As a chef, I want the best and tastiest ingredients. When cooking with what is in season, you are using ingredients with a higher nutritional value and optimal flavor. Mr. Troubetzkoy, the owner and architect of Jade Mountain, understood what it meant to have local and unique organic Caribbean ingredients for his guests to enjoy. He established his Emerald Estate, a thirty-acre organic farm, to be our source of high quality custom grown fresh tropical fruits, greens, vegetables, and spices solely for the resort’s restaurants.
Taste over trend: Caribbean seasonal flavors dance to a tropical beat. It’s almost impossible to talk about inspired cooking without talking about seasonality. Choosing and working with the right ingredients isn’t hard, but it does require a little know-how and planning to select at optimum taste.
If you spend time in Saint Lucia as I have, from year to year you can experience the seasons’ natural rhythms blending into each other. My favorite is mango season, which begins with beautiful purple or yellow blossoms in the dry season around January. The treetops of most villages blush with these floral colors. Within weeks, tiny pea sized mangos set, replacing the fading flowers. As the rainy season begins, you can see the transformation as the tree branches droop, heavy with clusters of green mangos. And by mid-rainy season, between June and July, the island is dripping with lush mangos in all colors of the rainbow: yellow, red, green, and purple. Mangos are happily devoured fresh out of one’s hand, chopped into salsa and chow chow, or cooked into jams, chutneys, curries, and pepper pots.
In Saint Lucia, the winter markets are filled with pineapple, carambola, and passion fruit along with locally grown citrus, including limes, shaddocks, tangerines, sour oranges, and sweet oranges. You may find that oranges here often have a green skin, as if they are not ripe yet. That is because the nights are not cool enough for the natural chemical reaction to turn them orange. Nonetheless, the local oranges are just as refreshingly juicy and sweet. The Soufriere street market is always beaming with red, green, and yellow seasoning peppers, sweet peppers, and hot peppers. The spice vendors hawk their ginger, turmeric, cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, allspice, chandon beni, cilantro, thyme, scallions, and scotch bonnets.
You can always find someone at the market year-round with freshly harvested coconuts piled high in the back of an old pickup, cracking them with his machete. Taste the coconut’s invigorating juice and share some of its sweet tender white flesh. Wooden tabletops are filled with rooty ground provisions such as earthy-tasting yams, sweet potatoes, dasheens, plantains, and green bananas, which are staples in local and Caribbean cooking.
As the tropics heat up into the rainy season, mango, papaya, soursop, watermelon, and guava are abundant. Be on the lookout for breadfruit, chayote, and avocado as they reach their peak season. If you are walking through the market, you are going to want to grab some of these treasures. There is nothing like a tree-ripened, sun-kissed fruit grown just a few miles down the road that was probably picked just that morning.
Happily, seasonal cooking is more sustainable. By focusing on locally grown food, you don’t have to navigate seasonality—that just falls into place naturally. At home in your kitchen, use the seasons to your advantage with beautiful, colorful, and fresh produce as well as fish and shellfish. Feel free to be creative in using these recipes for Caribbean inspiration to adapt to your local regional ingredients.
Fish Cookery
Fish is a backbone of Caribbean life. So much nourishment comes