A little more sophisticated – Choucroute and sea scallops with mustard sauce
Un peu plus sophistiqué – Coquilles de choucroute au St Jacques et sauce moutarde


When I get nostalgic, I turn towards food and cooking to bring me back some flavors and memories of Alsace-Lorraine. I am so lucky to be living in San Francisco, because I can always find something that takes me back home.
This time, it was choucroute, which is sourkraut, it’s basically shredded cabbage fermented for about one month with salt and isolated from air. Choucroute dish comes from Alsace region, Germany is bordering it and consume a lot of it a as well but not the same way. Both cuisines has some similarities, but Alsacian one has a French twist. I found this sourkraut at the Rainbow and it ‘s quite good. In the South Bay, you can find good choucroute at Ditmers, the German Butchers on San Antonio in Mountain View.
I am not certain that many Californians know much about this dish, but maybe those of German descent or Alsacian descent might. Traditional Choucroute is made with different kinds of pork meat, can be smoked and with different kinds of sausages and potatoes and served with strong mustard. It can also be made with fish and seafood, choucroute aux fruits de mer, and this one is more an inspiration of the seafood choucroute but in a small bite version.
Ingredients for about 10 bites
For the choucroute and scallops
- 10 large fresh sea scallops
- 3/4 lb choucroute
- 2 slices bacon
- 1/2 yellow onion, chopped
- 2 bay leaves
- 1/2 glass of white wine or pale ale beer
- 4 juniper berries
- 1 tbs olive oil
- salt and pepper
For the mustard sauce
- 2 small shallots, chopped
- 1 tsp Dijon mustard
- 1 tbs wine vinegar
- 3 tbs heavy cream
- 1 tsp olive oil
Preparation
Wash the cabbage. Bring a water to a boil and boil cabbage for about 2-3 minutes. Some people do not blanch it, but I prefer it blanched since it tends to get really acid sometimes. Blanching it will remove that acidity. Drain.
In a large pot, add olive oil and brown onions, add diced bacon. Cook bacon and let flavors come out. Add cabbage, juniper berries, bay leaves, wine, salt and pepper. Cover and cook at medium heat for about one hour.
For the mustard sauce, brown shallots in olive oil, add vinegar, reduce add mustard and cream.
Grill scallops on both sides. Place in individual appetizer dishes, one tbs of cabbage, then add one scallop and one tsp of mustard sauce.
| Print article | This entry was posted by silvia on April 27, 2009 at 8:32 pm, and is filed under Appetizers, Fish/Seafood. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |






about 2 years ago
Beautiful! The mustard sauce sounds heavenly!
about 2 years ago
hmm.. interesting combination. is this dish quite sharp then?
about 2 years ago
my great great grandfather was from Alsace and even though we’re all Italian, choucroute was something we always had at our house.
about 2 years ago
Your food is always so beautiful. Sounds delicious!
about 2 years ago
sounds really light and fresh, I love how elegant it looks too
about 2 years ago
I can’t wait to try this and your picture is beautiful!
about 2 years ago
Absolutely stunning! I can practically feel the scallop melting in my mouth.
about 2 years ago
Absolutely gorgeous! I love your dishes, too!
about 1 year ago
thanks!