Maryland Blue! How to make amazing Crab Cakes

Maryland Blues!

Making crab cakes is one of a crabbers most favorite things to do.

Blue crabs and Old Bay are about as Chesapeake Bay as you can get. The two are so intertwined that even in Florida, Old Bay and crab go together like sugar and spice. Florida’s Apalachicola Bay has taken some abuse but the crabs are resilient little creatures. Blue crab lump meat may be just about the best thing there is from the sea. A crab and chanterelle mushroom appetizer with a light lemon zest cream sauce and chives or a crab cake, full of crab and some vegetables and a bit of breadcrumb binder are just delightful.  The golden-brown of a nicely seared crab cake, corn maque choux and mustard sauce is one the best way to eat crab.

Easy Peasy

Making these crab cakes is pretty simple, and the recipe can be increased easily. I am presenting the recipe for 1 pound of lump crab meat. Buy lump meat as it is highly preferred and has the largest pieces of meat so each bite gets chunks of crab. Claw meat can certainly work. The texture will be a bit different since the crab pieces are smaller and may be almost shredded. The main thing is flavor and both kinds of crab taste good. If you live in an area where fresh crab is either not available, too expensive, you might consider an on-line source. If at all possible, try to avoid pasteurized crab meat. Sure, it’s pasteurized, but it just doesn’t taste the same and I think the texture is a bit off.

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The Stuff Inside

In either case, fresh or pasteurized, crab meat has little tendons inside the meat and sometimes bits of shell make their way into the container. It happens. You will need to check each piece of crab for tendons. Jumbo lump, lump, or special is preferred as there are often just a few bits to find. Claw meat or backfin meat can have more bits that are challenging to find but cannot be eaten. Here is a tip for how to find shells quickly.  The picture on the recipe shows a corn dish.  I use this, Corn Maque Choux.  Very tasty and fits well.

Crab Cakes

Man, not too much is better than an amazing crab cake and an ice cold beer.  Beer is another recipe, but crab cakes we got covered and Boy, Howdy!, they'se good.

Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings 6
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

Standard Dressing

  • 1 C Mayonnaise
  • 1 oz Creole or horseradish mustard
  • pinch Garlic powder
  • dash Worcestershire Sauce
  • Salt and pepper

Crab Cakes

  • 1 lb Lump crab meat, picked, kept cold
  • 1/2 each Red bell pepper, small dice
  • 1/4 each Red onion, small dice
  • 1/2 each Leek white, rinsed, small dice
  • 1 each Stalk of celery, small dice
  • 1 T Fresh chopped dill
  • 1/2 each Orange, juiced and strained
  • Dash Worcestershire sauce
  • .25-.5 C Fresh ground white bread bread crumbs
  • Standard dressing, to bind
  • Salt and pepper

Instructions

Prepare Standard Dressing

  1. Mix all ingredients will. Adjust the ratios to your taste.

Prepare Crab Cakes

  1. Saute all the vegetables until just tender. Spread them out on a sheet pan and let them cool. When cool, add them to the crab meat. Add the remaining ingredients and gently fold everything together. Since everything in this is cooked, taste it for seasoning. Adjust as you wish.

  2. To portion these, we used to use a small baking pan which was about a 4 ounce volume. It resembles the top of a Talenti ice cream container. Depending on what your use is for the crab cakes, dinner or appetizer, that will determine your portion size. I find two 4 ounce cakes with vegetables is plenty. You may use a half cup measure, a disher (ice cream scoop looking thing) or the top of ice cream. Having a mold is helpful to keep a round shape. Sprinkle some bread crumbs onto a plastic wrap lined sheet pan. This will be where you place the measured cakes. Sprinkle bread crumbs into the cup or ice cream lid and lift crab meat mix into that. Push gently to flatten and tip out onto the bread crumb lined sheet pan. Repeat with all the crab mix. Is it not recommended you freeze this mix. If you have more than you need and no neighbors to share dinner with, cook them all and freeze the cooked cakes. If you are using a scoop, start with the plastic wrap lined sheet pan with bread crumbs, scoop the crab mix onto that. With a small piece of plastic wrap, push the crab mix flat and sprinkle with bread crumbs, and tap them into the crab cake. Refrrigerate for 1 hour before cooking.

  3. Heat a griddle or a non-stick pan to medium heat. I prefer peanut or corn oil for most of my browning (bacon fat is yum but not for everything). Gently lift the plastic and then get your fingers under the crab cake. Place it carefully into the pan. Don’t overcrowd the pan. Leaving space between is preferred for access to flipping them and also to keep the heat in the pan so the brown well and don’t simmer. When browned nicely, flip over, repeat on the second side. If you want an internal temperature, look for 165 degrees. They can be held in a warm oven while you prepare the accompaniments.

Recipe Notes

If you prefer to not have another dressing in the cooler, the Buttermilk Dressing here is a fine choice.  A bit more herby, but that's a bonus.  If you balk and the buttermilk, worry not.  You make pancakes with it.

Hot, Salty, Soft Pretzels Are YUM!

Get Your Hot Pretzels!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Or, better yet, make your hot pretzels.

My youngest calls them “prentzels” and we let her because it’s cute.  Her little linguistic gyrations will come to an end soon enough so there’s no reason not to enjoy it.

When I was a kid in Sterling Heights, MI, a suburb of Detroit, my dad and I would venture on occasion to the Oakland Mall.  Two stores were the most important to me: Sander’s Ice Cream Parlor and Hot Sam’s Pretzels.  They were great: big and soft and hot and salty and chewy and, with a bit of yellow mustard, probably the best thing ever.

As an adult I visited that mall, but somewhere between us moving away and my return, Sam’s went away too.  Soft warm salty yeasty chewy pretzels seemed a fondness of days gone by.  I’ll eat a crunchy pretzel, but my fondness was for that Proustian connection to the soft pretzel.

My kids like to watch the Tasty videos of food.  Probably more for the sped up camera which makes mixing really cool to watch.  They ooh and ahh at some things, and my wife sends them to me.  One was the soft pretzel.  The younger one really likes to help with everything and has to have her eyeballs right there.  Driving a screw, “I wanna watch.”  Throwing darts, “Can I do it?”  So, mixing dough was going to be a two person job.  She did fine.

We let our dough rest in the refrigerator overnight.  If you do that, allow it an hour to warm up a bit before you work with the dough.  It’s much easier to get the long ropes needed for big pretzels.  Also, pretzels, properly done, require a special kind of lye-caustic soda-in the water when you boil them.  It does make a difference and purists will scoff at you for not using it. If you use lye, do take care as well.  It is caustic.  Not time for silliness.  You can get some at the link below, but if you prefer to use baking soda instead, it does work.  A word of caution, however, about the soda: it is a leavener which means it makes air when it hits the hot water, the air takes the form of foam and it might overflow the top of your pot a moment.

Soft Pretzel Dough

Of course, soft pretzels are fabulous, but so too are pretzel buns.

I don't boil the buns.  I prefer a softer roll for sandwiches, but of course, that is a personal preference.

Course Bread
Cuisine American
Keyword Pretzel, Pretzel roll, Soft pretzel
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Fermenting and proofing 2 hours
Total Time 25 minutes
Servings 8 5 oz rolls or pretzels
Author Dann Reid

Ingredients

Pretzel Dough

  • 720 g Bread flour
  • 411 g Room temperature water
  • 17 g Salt
  • 11 g Sugar
  • 21 g Oil
  • 6 g Instant yeast

Topping

  • 2/3 C Baking soda
  • 1 each Egg, beaten
  • Coarse pretzel salt Kosher will work

Instructions

  1. 1.  Heat oven to 450°F.

  2. 2.  In a bowl, mix flour, salt, and sugar, yeast and 2 tablespoons of oil. Mix thoroughly until a dough forms. Transfer the dough to the counter and kneed it for about 3 minutes to really work the dough and develop the texture. You will also start to feel the dough get a bit warm and smooth.

    Pretzel dough is a stiff dough and my small counter top mixer gets a bit taxed here.  A good kneed on the counter ensures a good dough.

  3. 3. Lightly oil the bottom and sides of the mixing bowl (it's okay if it isn't washed out). Place the dough into the bowl, roll it around to coat it in oil.

  4. 4. Cover bowl with plastic wrap, and leave in a warm place for 1 hour.

  5. 5. Cut dough into 8 pieces (about 143 grams or 5 ounces) and roll them out into thin ropes, about 14 inches long. If your dough is a tad cool, it is acceptable to let the rope rest, covered with plastic wrap, and let it rest a few minutes. Turn and fold the two ends to form a pretzel shape.

  6. 6. Add baking soda to a large pot of salted water, and bring to a rolling boil. Boil each pretzel for 30 seconds per side.

  7. 7. Remove pretzels from the water and place on a baking sheet. Brush with egg wash, and sprinkle with coarse salt. You can really individualize the pretzels: sesame seeds, garlic powder, cinnamon sugar. Invent.

  8. 8. Bake for 10-15 minutes, until golden brown.

  9. 9. Enjoy!

Recipe Video

Recipe Notes

I love a good pretzel roll, or pretzel, for a sandwich or a snack.

Experiment with different coarse salts on top and different dipping sauces for the pretzels.

Try some sticks as well as the traditionally shaped pretzels.

 

Shaped pretzels proofing. Soon to be boiled.
Boiling the pretzels. The foam is partly from the baking soda and partly from the flour. This is normal.
One kid smelling the yeasty goodness, the other egg washing before she cinnamon sugars her’s.
Lots of cinnamon sugar.
Salt on one, cinnamon sugar on the other two. Mine, as samples for how-to, are at the top. They both got salt and one garlic powder.
Yum! The kitchen smelled grand and when they were still warm, well, just heavenly. For the adults in the room, a beer is perfect.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For another option, make rolls.  These are my version.

Pretzel rolls with smoked sea salt.

I scaled them at 4 oz, and, save the one round one, rolled them into a rectangle and folded them long edges to the middle then the ends to the center to create a rectangular roll.

Proof seam side down.  When almost ready to bake, press them with a flat pan, egg wash, salt and bake.  I baked them about 18 minutes.

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