Their friendship is *chef's kiss*. So great to see! And it's fun to see Ben coming in with the shots fired first. 😁🤣 "You need as many muscles as you can get" "That was unnecessary, I've been working out. I've been trying" "Have you?" "I know." 😂
I have an Amazon Subscribe and Save order for the Matiz variety pack. I can't get enough of it. I usually eat it with ramen, or with quinoa if I'm feeling healthy.
Canned seafood industry it's very important where i come from, Galicia in the NW Spain :) We have wonderfull seafood in our coasts, so we do produce high quality canned seafood. I love to see you guys enjoying our food. 😍 Btw, in the third can, Xouba is pronounced like "Show-bah". They are little sardines. We use to eat them covered in simple flour and deep fryed. Amazing!! And the four one, the razor clams, they are from a little island near my hometown!! I'm enjoying so much this episode, seen you discovering the greatness of my homeland seafood.🤩🤩🤩
I just went to a sushi restaurant in Tokyo and found monk fish liver sushi on the menu. I remembered seeing this video so I immediately ordered this sushi. Wow! Mind blowing!! Sushi rice, nori, monkfish liver, fish eggs and topped with thinly sliced spring onion. I am so glad I watched this video, otherwise it would never occurred to me to order this sushi. Thank you sorted food for new inspirations and ideas! You have enriched my food repertoire.
Yes you can find it but pretending that monk fish liver is a staple of japanese cuisine is just being untruthful. Also this nose to fin bull is just that bull. Yes there are instances that the offal is used but most japanese kitchens I have seen have waste because they aren't using everything, especially high end sushi places that use live fish, they just mostly gut the fish pull any roe and toss the rest. This fetishization of other cultures is pretty disgusting.
Monkfish liver in Japan is a premium part of the monkfish. We don't eat the liver of many fish, but this is a very popular one. We often eat it with ponzu (citrus soy sauce) and finely chopped spring onions.
Yes, exactly! I also enjoy adding daikon radish or momiji oroshi and pairing it with shiso leaves or seaweed. Sometimes, I like it plain when I drink sake. Recently, I tried sushi with monkfish, and it was absolutely delicious.
Lovely to see Espinaler on your video. We’re about 5 minutes from their factory, so eat a lot of their products. If you want to go a level up from them, you should try Carpier who do amazing canned fish, but are best known for their amazing smoked products. Carlos, the owner, is also a real character!
You guys should go fishing/foraging on the Cornwall coast with John Locker (from The Fish Locker)! He is constantly catching and cooking razor clams and other seafood, and he really knows his stuff. I love watching his channel!
well you did it. I bought a tikket for both days even though I will end up watching it afterwards because of time :( You guys bring joy to my evenings after my work. I love you all and wish you an amazing Weekend livestream!! Your videos are a small part of my life and I am glad to support you this way. Thank you.
I can't believe my husband and I are accidentally trendy. We do tinned seafood dinners all the time. A bit of good cheese, sourdough and some lovely tins is my idea of a great time
This might be my favorite episode so far! You even had me looking for a lost can of fish liver in my pantry but it seems I'm all out. I guess I'm adding it to my grocery list!
@@SortedFood Woop I got noticed! Using the spotlight for maybe a video idea. One of the major causes of death of seamen are diabetes, high cholestorol and heart disease due to poor diet. Fresh vegetables and fruit can't carry long, and ships are not ideal places to cook in + storage is limited. As a marine biologists who stays at seas for months, I have resorted to creating my own dried meals/dried fruits, but most don't taste the greatest. Would the chefs maybe have some ideas? (I'm talking of going at sea, but I assume this would also be interested hikers for instance)
@@Afrolovertje I'm in the US, and when I was prepping for backpacks, I would look for dehydrated/freeze dried veggies and meats and beans, and just got creative with versions. If you're not backpacking and you can use canned, you have more options - canned tomatoes vs dehydrated tomato powder (there's also tomato paste in a tube). There's also pesto available in a tube which works great with pasta (you can add pine nuts and cheese, although the cheese won't last months...). I've also found freeze-dried blue cheese powder (really amazing) that totally packs flavor. Instant polenta with freeze-dried sausage, some of that blue cheese powder, and some freeze-dried olives turned out to be a surprising hit. Also I'd go for freeze-dried veggies and add some salt, maybe some tomato powder to amp up flavor, so we'd have veggies on the trail. There's an amazing amount of stuff available, at least here in the US, and I would just try to come up with flavor combinations that would work for options. It just took a lot of internet searching to find the products...
@@Afrolovertje I don't know how big or small the boat is. but I you could look if it works to bring a few potted herbs/vegetables with you on board. As in living. It's nice to even see some green when you are at see for so long. plus that way it is always fresh. you could ether try to keep it alive constantly or just long enough until you get back to port. then you can replace them. some can grow really easy like the herbs you see people grow on a balcony or even just there windowsill. it also helps a bit with moral on board. just seeing that plant growing can be a change of scenery from that endless blue water.
I wish my grocers carried the more fancy tinned seafood. I like things like sardines and kippered mackerel even if they are a bit strong smelling. I remember having tinned octopus once as a kid on a dare and actually enjoying it, though it was a little rubbery. Tinned clams and mussels would be something I would try.
Omg! I love monkfish liver! Or better known as ankimo. I've been told it's kind of like foie gras of the sea. Best way to eat it in my opinion is with ponzu and topped with momiji orishi (grated daikon and chili peppers). And since it's a seasonal autumn/winter dish, best drink together with hot sake. AAh, craving some now
For some reason, canned/tinned mussels is a childhood thing for me too. My grandma's boyfriend when I was like 4-8 loved them, and had me try them. So whenever I have them now, I remember the time he took me fishing in the cabin.
Finally yay i know this is a weird one for a lot of people!!! I'm sure you've done your research for the episode! In the US, r/cannedsardines is basically ground zero for the new appreciation of tinned food and I've watched the groundswell of tinned seafood in the US move from these niche subreddits to the mainstream, and the tinned seafood foodtubes that came from it have been fun to watch too! As it got enough support, it flowed into the traditional tapas traditions of Spain, Netherlands, etc, to the point it is now a "rediscovery" of traditional foods and there are now a few fancy/uber hipster US restaurants that offer a tinned seafood menu, so chefs are now on it too. I really enjoyed watching that sub grow from niche "weirdo gross canned cat food eaters" to a newly re-gentrified version of a food trend!!! Hopefully this means even more high quality brands for those who always found the experience a delight.
I was speaking to a Masterchef Australia contestant the other day & she was saying that serving tinned fish like they do in some Spanish & Portuguese restaurants is becoming a big thing in the Melbourne food scene too. wish it would catch on here in the UK too, it can make for a fun evening having a few drinks with friends.
When visiting Australia from east coast US, I was surprised how many options there were in tinned fish. The add-ins were something I had never experienced. Like a good tourist I took tons of photos
Going to a grocery store is one of my favourite things when traveling! Even in my own country (Canada) because what I have in the rural prairies isn't the same as Quebec or St. John. I'm quite easily entertained. Would it be the same for Australia? Perth and Sydney having different stuff?
I would recommend for more tinned fish, fried dace with black beans. This is a Cantonese favorite with a bowl of rice. I grew up with the Pearl River Bridge brand, and highly recommend it!
i had to look up the mussels after seeing them because they looked incredible. the fried fish in a tin didn't surprise me that much. one of my favorite things when i was a picky eater kid was this thing sold in asian supermarkets that is just tinned fried dace with black beans and oil. it's super super salty, but it also has bones you can easily eat, and it's great to eat with plain rice.
I’m not generally a canned fish person, but you two gents did such a wonderful job describing them, I feel like I would quite enjoy them ( with wine, not beer)
My father introduced us to canned fish at a young age. Favorites being smoked oysters, kippered herring, sardines and canned salmon for salmon cakes. I still love it to this day and it's so easy to take a can, some saltines and a ziplock of crudites for a work lunch. It's also great food for camping. Living in Missouri, it's easy to get freshwater fish in the warmer months but obviously not so much seafood any time of year (I miss San Diego!)
Smoked kippers in a tin are some of my favorite treats. My grandfather and I often went fishing and ate sardines with saltine crackers and real Amish butter(we live near a small ordnung). My grandmother used to make a fluffy canned salmon and mashed potato croquettes that she served with a cream sauce with little peas and those little pearl onions. She was from Germany lots of little croquettes with potatoes and meats and sauces. Parsley sauce is a really good one.
@@Emeraldwitch30, nice memories. But I have had coworkers act as though I brought poison into work even though I always clean the tin and any utensils before discarding them. I literally had to take the trash bag out of the office after one coworker made such a ruckus about my kippers, even though I washed the tin including the lid with soap and the fork I used. Then she said there was something wrong with me to eat food that smells and tastes like ass! I was fed up and just asked how she knew how ass smells and tastes.
In South Africa we flour batter and fry fish before pickling it, the flour batter helps absorb some of the curry pickling liquid while also protecting the fish so it remains white and fresh in flavour.
I grew up in the mountains far from sea so tinned fish (or frozen) was much easier to find than fresh. Battered fish (usually herring, but other sea fish work too) marinated in vinegar is a thing in Poland, so that doesn't surprise me at all.
Here in the Pacific Northwest of the USA our coasts are pretty rich with razor clams. They are bigger than those in your tin and they really do have two distinct parts. Shucking and rinsing them is a lot of work, but they make fantastic chowder, fry up beautifully, and are also pretty good steamed.
Marine biologist checking in, while they're both called razor because of the shape resembling a straight razor, pacific razor clams and atlantic razor clams are entirely unrelated clams. The european razor clams and East coast America/canada razor clams are the same genus, different species, though.
I adore tinned seafood. I can have seafood for myself without the hassle of getting it and cooking it, smelling up the house. I can have them in the house and enjoy them or do something with them. I adore Sardines in all forms, octopus, squid, Shellfish. In different oils, sauces, combinations. I hope more people give it a try and search out top quality that is sustainable, delicious seafood.
This is the ONLY channel on which I will actually watch a review of tinned fish *shudders*! Thanks for keeping it entertaining, gentlemen, and 'see' you tomorrow!
Feeling all the good feelings being from Galicia And when I realized you were trying to pronounce xoubas, I died a little. It is sardines in Galician, because we have our own language :) My favourite canned seafood are zamburiñas. They are like tiny scalops. *chef's kiss*
my dad lives near the Espinaler cannery! It has a large shop front and small restaurant and all they serve is different kinds of tinned fish, cured meats, beer and vermouth and it is always excellent.
This was fascinating and came at a good time. We just did a sampler from our local cheese shop and it came with Italian tinned sardines with ratatouille (tomato, eggplant, onion, carrot in ours I think). My wife and I weren't fans, but it was because it still struck us as pretty 'fishy'. I'd love to try the razor clams and will have to keep an eye out for those.
If you like scallops then you'll love razor clams. They're sweeter & better tasting in my mind. They're also great raw, if you're collecting them from a clean beach you just pull off the brown bits & the digger foot pulls off easily.
@@Getpojke Thanks friend! I've been able to try them before, but I'll have to keep an eye out for the tin. We don't get too many imports in Kansas City, but if you keep an eye out now and then you get lucky.
What a wonderful bit of fun tasting experience. I nearly skipped this because I literally cannot stomach seafood, but once again you guys really gave me an appreciation for something I wouldn't actually experience this way.
Shopping Spree! I ordered all of your tins via Amazon. 😂 Every time you showcase foods/products, I start shopping. What I really want is Barry’s PRETENTIOUS sweatshirt! See you all this weekend. 🎉❤
im absolutely over the moon to see fish liver in here! Tinned cod liver is one of my absolute favourite things, it's eaten in Iceland, Spain and Russia and it's so good!
The brines from the ones canned in such make for excellent broth even for cooking in a sauce. I’d cook the sauce then add only the brine for water and flavor before dressing the fish in said sauce.
I grew up in South Germany where there is actually no fish -- yes there are some sweetwater fish, but not seawater fish that you get at the coast. So I only knew tinned fish or breaded fish fingers or fillets. No matter if they are yummy or not, they are good childhood memories. Oh, my childhood memories go back to times when Ebbers' parents were (presumably) not even close to even think about their relationship.
I don’t mean to be rude, and I speak German so I understand how you came to your conclusion, aber Süßwasser heißt „freshwater“ auf Englisch. And I never realized until now how funny sweetwater sounds 😂
@@-_pi_- No offense taken. I actually know this, but at that moment that word didn't come to the keyboard. Thank you for bringing that word back to my mind. 👍
@@josefhahn4599 Yeah but one is like, categorically wrong. Saying south Germany is something a native speaker could also do. No native English speaker would say sweetwater.
Monkfish liver - Ankimo (あん肝) is my favorite beer food. In Japan it is served with ponzu. The season are around fall and winter. Ooarai, is a town that specializes in Monkfish dishes and they have the tastiest Ankimo. They are also known as Foie Gras of the Sea.
Anchovies from Santoña, Spain are amazing and a must try…when I travel back to Spain, I always bring Santoña anchovies with me back to the States. Santoña is in Northern Spain, also Cantabrian.
I love mussels in italian restaurants in tomato or white wine brooth and simple white bread, nithing else needed. But I always shied away from canned mussles, now I finally found my courage and buy a can in the mid price segment and I really love it. So thank you so much to push me in tge right direction to try.
Great experience. These simple tins are considered a delicacy in Spain and Portugal. Watch out for mussels (mejillones en escabeche) when there are only 3-5 pieces per tin. Very pricey but the mussels will be XXXL size and simply delicious. Also squid or octopus in various sauces are always a special treat. At the top you will find oysters, sea urchins and as shown razor clams.
I'm from Spain but I live in the UK... When I visit I always bring a few cans of mussels 😁 You can buy them everywhere, although maybe not that specific one, that looks fancy 😅 BTW, the way I eat them is with a piece of bread and enjoying the sauce/oil and mussels, that's it
My favorit tinned fish here in Sweden is maceral fillet in a rich tomato sous. Just put it on some hard bread and enjoy. Or salmon buns in a lobster sous. Scrape of the sous and ad it to some béchamel for extra sous. Coat the fish in bread crumbs and fry them and serve with potatoes.
The monkfish liver is quite popular in Middle-Eastern Europe, too! I used to love it as a kid so much that I once got like twenty cans for Christmas from my parents :D (as a joke, but I was overjoyed, lol). We also used to take it with us for festival and camping, since it was easy to scoop from the can with a piece of bread
The great thing about a sorted video is even when the boys are tasting a category of food I can’t stand, I still really enjoy watching & always learn something (but still never trying anything resembling “moussey-tuna 😮😂)
I would love to have seen roasted eels in this lineup -- my favorite tinned fish. I was chowing down on a tin of them for lunch at work one day, and a Jamaican coworker had a conniption over it, telling me "ya eat from dat tin and ya gonna get ptomaine poisonin' an' die." Quaint fellow. He was made redundant a few weeks later.
In Germany, we have liver of cod in tin with oil. My moms' family loved always fish, and she shows me that. You can put it in salad . I love it pure with toast. 😊
My Pop loved all tins of fish, but the rest of the family stuck with tuna. As a grown up, I've tried some, but haven't been impressed. Thanks for doing this VIDEO! I'm learning a lot. 😊
Fish and seafood is something I never liked as a child, but as I grow increasingly aware of the enormous diversity I’m making an effort to try more of. These seem like a brilliant way to do that, as my ‘enjoyment’ isn’t hinged on cooking them properly. I’m interested in the monkfish liver especially.
Razor clams all the way!! My husband is originally from Washington State and got to grow up clamming every season (when red tide allowed) and razor clams were his favorite thing in the world. Battered and fried, cooked in clam chowder or from a can even; it's instant nostalgia for him. We go back to visit from time to time but I got to have my first crack at clamming a few years ago to get my own fresh when we flew out there and 🤤 they're worth every penny. There's shops down by the beaches that sell canned razor clams in the off seasons and I also got to pack a bag full of them for my return home so I could have some for special occasions!
Fascinating stuff. If only there was something like that coming soon to the BBC in a brand new drama series: MONKFISH LIVER! A tough, uncompromising pate...
I love all tinned seafood and always have. I repurpose the empty tins to create art. I mainly create fish ponds. Sometimes in a sculpted landscape or just in the tin alone. I miss the key style lids 😢 Heidi
I love monkfish liver, and often get it from my favorite Japanese restaurant or market! Never thought to look for it in a tin before, but now I’ll have to! 🙂
Just bought my tickets for the whole weekend event. Looking forward to it as I'm laid up in bed injured at the moment. Hope it goes well & the team has fun doing it.
I was always confused as to why I would always see tempura shrimp or really tempura anything sitting in a bowl of ramen.... but I guess it's not always about it being super crispy. Also, I love the bones in any tinned fish 🐟
I've ended up discovering a few creators on tiktok who have a lot of premium tinned fish and the variety out there is incredible. I really hope there are more episodes of this
Hahaha. When I saw the title I was curious about whether I'll discover something new or not because I'm from somewhere with a big tin fish culture only to discover all cans came from where I'm from 😂😂. So I knew them all (and have tried them all, even if not from the same brand). It was interesting seeing the guys discovering something I'm so familiar with, and Ben was right, they're great for when you want to go camping or to the beach or pool to have a little snack with some vermú or manzanilla and you don't have to worry about how long they will keep (specially considering how hot the summers can get). And there are enough cans left for another video indeed. Can't wait to see what you guys will do with it.
This was a great video. Seeing fish related content is always interesting, seems like there's always a new fish, or part of fish to explore and learn about!
You should have one video on East Asian tinned seafood as well as another about Southeast Asian ones. There's such a variety of products, flavours and prices there to choose from, you could probably even have a whole series on Asian tinned seafood!
On the topic of monkfish, I'd love to see the chefs (or normals) try to prepare one the traditional Japanese method with it hanging from a hook, that'd be interesting to watch!
I always hated tinned fish other than tuna. But when I was staying with a Karen homestay in Thailand I began to love tinned tomato mackerel, they mixed it with chili and just ate it with rice but it was such a good lunch time meal
Hi Sweden here , I order Foie gras once every year before xmas And their cheapest can (duck) is 12:- english Pounds and i would love to try the monkfish one. SO thank you for the information about it.
BTW, in most Northern European countries you can get the tin fish liver in various forms (also smoked, natural, and with herbs). As for the battered fish, Poland is expert at this. Paired with good bread and a side of whole sweet pickled cucumber , it is a delight! Give it another try....
You missed the opportunity to try berberechos... With Espinaler sauce, a staple vermouth side plate. (Espinaler was originally know by it's sauce, used mostly for tinned fish, but now they also sell selected tinned "vermouth" products, like the razor clams ) Not sure if in the rest of Spain, but in Catalonia the typical weekend apperitive is a vermouth with berberechos, mussels (Or any other canned seafood) and crisps.
Their friendship is *chef's kiss*. So great to see! And it's fun to see Ben coming in with the shots fired first. 😁🤣
"You need as many muscles as you can get"
"That was unnecessary, I've been working out. I've been trying"
"Have you?"
"I know."
😂
and these two are perfect for this segment!
You cannot beat the Spanish and the Portuguese in the realm of canned seafood, It's such a proud cultural touchstone for us
You guys got places that serve canned fish so that shit must be good 😂
A can of Nuri Sardines is better than fish and chips for me.
Yeah, I really dig the Nuris. Tasty stuff.
I have an Amazon Subscribe and Save order for the Matiz variety pack. I can't get enough of it. I usually eat it with ramen, or with quinoa if I'm feeling healthy.
Depends on the fish frankly but their brands produce reliably tasty sardines.
Yes! We'd love a date #2, guys! Definitely do more of these!
Canned seafood industry it's very important where i come from, Galicia in the NW Spain :) We have wonderfull seafood in our coasts, so we do produce high quality canned seafood. I love to see you guys enjoying our food. 😍 Btw, in the third can, Xouba is pronounced like "Show-bah". They are little sardines. We use to eat them covered in simple flour and deep fryed. Amazing!! And the four one, the razor clams, they are from a little island near my hometown!! I'm enjoying so much this episode, seen you discovering the greatness of my homeland seafood.🤩🤩🤩
I just went to a sushi restaurant in Tokyo and found monk fish liver sushi on the menu. I remembered seeing this video so I immediately ordered this sushi. Wow! Mind blowing!! Sushi rice, nori, monkfish liver, fish eggs and topped with thinly sliced spring onion. I am so glad I watched this video, otherwise it would never occurred to me to order this sushi. Thank you sorted food for new inspirations and ideas! You have enriched my food repertoire.
Yes you can find it but pretending that monk fish liver is a staple of japanese cuisine is just being untruthful. Also this nose to fin bull is just that bull. Yes there are instances that the offal is used but most japanese kitchens I have seen have waste because they aren't using everything, especially high end sushi places that use live fish, they just mostly gut the fish pull any roe and toss the rest. This fetishization of other cultures is pretty disgusting.
Monkfish liver in Japan is a premium part of the monkfish. We don't eat the liver of many fish, but this is a very popular one. We often eat it with ponzu (citrus soy sauce) and finely chopped spring onions.
Yes, exactly! I also enjoy adding daikon radish or momiji oroshi and pairing it with shiso leaves or seaweed. Sometimes, I like it plain when I drink sake. Recently, I tried sushi with monkfish, and it was absolutely delicious.
Ben and Barry are a great team. Love them together.
Just bought tickets for the wild weekender. Hopefully my package arrived safe and sound!
Thanks so much for your support, and for sending us a package 😁 We hope you have the best time watching us LIVE.
Let's take a moment to appreciate Ebbers' ability to open tins in the most "chef-y" way. This man has kitchen charisma turned up to 11!👨🍳
xtreme rizz confirmed
Really loved watching Ben continuesly tasting each tin.
Lovely to see Espinaler on your video. We’re about 5 minutes from their factory, so eat a lot of their products. If you want to go a level up from them, you should try Carpier who do amazing canned fish, but are best known for their amazing smoked products. Carlos, the owner, is also a real character!
I was kind of expecting Surstrømming being the last tin. Wise decision to not go this far 😂
Been there, done that (poor Barry!):ua-cam.com/video/RO7Nfk6RGzE/v-deo.html
Just opening the tin would be fun; can imagine the faces they may make...lol
They already done that poor Barry’s food hell it was hilarious though go find the video 😂
@scousemummy8856 🤣🤣🤣 I must have missed that one too!
Watch their Fermented food poker face as its included
You guys should go fishing/foraging on the Cornwall coast with John Locker (from The Fish Locker)! He is constantly catching and cooking razor clams and other seafood, and he really knows his stuff. I love watching his channel!
well you did it. I bought a tikket for both days even though I will end up watching it afterwards because of time :(
You guys bring joy to my evenings after my work. I love you all and wish you an amazing Weekend livestream!! Your videos are a small part of my life and I am glad to support you this way. Thank you.
It'll be great entertainment and help you wind down! Just finished both days and you won't be disappointed. 😁
I can't believe my husband and I are accidentally trendy. We do tinned seafood dinners all the time. A bit of good cheese, sourdough and some lovely tins is my idea of a great time
This might be my favorite episode so far! You even had me looking for a lost can of fish liver in my pantry but it seems I'm all out. I guess I'm adding it to my grocery list!
Worked on Spanish vessels a lot and these tins of mussels or ansjovis were amazing snacks 😂
We bet!!!
@@SortedFood Woop I got noticed!
Using the spotlight for maybe a video idea.
One of the major causes of death of seamen are diabetes, high cholestorol and heart disease due to poor diet. Fresh vegetables and fruit can't carry long, and ships are not ideal places to cook in + storage is limited.
As a marine biologists who stays at seas for months, I have resorted to creating my own dried meals/dried fruits, but most don't taste the greatest. Would the chefs maybe have some ideas?
(I'm talking of going at sea, but I assume this would also be interested hikers for instance)
@@Afrolovertje I'm in the US, and when I was prepping for backpacks, I would look for dehydrated/freeze dried veggies and meats and beans, and just got creative with versions. If you're not backpacking and you can use canned, you have more options - canned tomatoes vs dehydrated tomato powder (there's also tomato paste in a tube). There's also pesto available in a tube which works great with pasta (you can add pine nuts and cheese, although the cheese won't last months...). I've also found freeze-dried blue cheese powder (really amazing) that totally packs flavor. Instant polenta with freeze-dried sausage, some of that blue cheese powder, and some freeze-dried olives turned out to be a surprising hit. Also I'd go for freeze-dried veggies and add some salt, maybe some tomato powder to amp up flavor, so we'd have veggies on the trail. There's an amazing amount of stuff available, at least here in the US, and I would just try to come up with flavor combinations that would work for options. It just took a lot of internet searching to find the products...
Love your detailed response!
@@Afrolovertje I don't know how big or small the boat is. but I you could look if it works to bring a few potted herbs/vegetables with you on board.
As in living. It's nice to even see some green when you are at see for so long. plus that way it is always fresh.
you could ether try to keep it alive constantly or just long enough until you get back to port. then you can replace them.
some can grow really easy like the herbs you see people grow on a balcony or even just there windowsill.
it also helps a bit with moral on board. just seeing that plant growing can be a change of scenery from that endless blue water.
When Baz said "a mousse-y tuna finish" I proper envisioned a tuna with giant moose antlers for a hot second... 😅
I didn't until I read this and now I can't unsee it😂
@@annermack Happy to be of service 🤣
I wish my grocers carried the more fancy tinned seafood. I like things like sardines and kippered mackerel even if they are a bit strong smelling. I remember having tinned octopus once as a kid on a dare and actually enjoying it, though it was a little rubbery. Tinned clams and mussels would be something I would try.
Omg! I love monkfish liver! Or better known as ankimo. I've been told it's kind of like foie gras of the sea.
Best way to eat it in my opinion is with ponzu and topped with momiji orishi (grated daikon and chili peppers). And since it's a seasonal autumn/winter dish, best drink together with hot sake. AAh, craving some now
Look for cod liver in a can. Its lovely too.
For some reason, canned/tinned mussels is a childhood thing for me too. My grandma's boyfriend when I was like 4-8 loved them, and had me try them. So whenever I have them now, I remember the time he took me fishing in the cabin.
Finally yay i know this is a weird one for a lot of people!!! I'm sure you've done your research for the episode! In the US, r/cannedsardines is basically ground zero for the new appreciation of tinned food and I've watched the groundswell of tinned seafood in the US move from these niche subreddits to the mainstream, and the tinned seafood foodtubes that came from it have been fun to watch too! As it got enough support, it flowed into the traditional tapas traditions of Spain, Netherlands, etc, to the point it is now a "rediscovery" of traditional foods and there are now a few fancy/uber hipster US restaurants that offer a tinned seafood menu, so chefs are now on it too. I really enjoyed watching that sub grow from niche "weirdo gross canned cat food eaters" to a newly re-gentrified version of a food trend!!! Hopefully this means even more high quality brands for those who always found the experience a delight.
have been in that sub since there was fewer than 100 people in it, has been strange to see it get so big!
I was speaking to a Masterchef Australia contestant the other day & she was saying that serving tinned fish like they do in some Spanish & Portuguese restaurants is becoming a big thing in the Melbourne food scene too. wish it would catch on here in the UK too, it can make for a fun evening having a few drinks with friends.
When visiting Australia from east coast US, I was surprised how many options there were in tinned fish. The add-ins were something I had never experienced. Like a good tourist I took tons of photos
Going to a grocery store is one of my favourite things when traveling! Even in my own country (Canada) because what I have in the rural prairies isn't the same as Quebec or St. John.
I'm quite easily entertained.
Would it be the same for Australia? Perth and Sydney having different stuff?
While visiting Uluru, the frozen food section of the 1 local grocer on the grounds had full kangaroo tails. That was a bit of a surprise.
I would recommend for more tinned fish, fried dace with black beans. This is a Cantonese favorite with a bowl of rice. I grew up with the Pearl River Bridge brand, and highly recommend it!
i had to look up the mussels after seeing them because they looked incredible. the fried fish in a tin didn't surprise me that much. one of my favorite things when i was a picky eater kid was this thing sold in asian supermarkets that is just tinned fried dace with black beans and oil. it's super super salty, but it also has bones you can easily eat, and it's great to eat with plain rice.
Yes!!! Fried dace in salted black beans. Amazingly delicious with rice porridge
I'm Spanish and we can find any kind of delicious tinned food in the supermarket. They are usually in the high end but still easy to get.
I’m not generally a canned fish person, but you two gents did such a wonderful job describing them, I feel like I would quite enjoy them ( with wine, not beer)
The way Ebbers said "I don't know" at 7:05 gave me Julia Child vibes and I love it.
My father introduced us to canned fish at a young age. Favorites being smoked oysters, kippered herring, sardines and canned salmon for salmon cakes.
I still love it to this day and it's so easy to take a can, some saltines and a ziplock of crudites for a work lunch. It's also great food for camping.
Living in Missouri, it's easy to get freshwater fish in the warmer months but obviously not so much seafood any time of year (I miss San Diego!)
Smoked kippers in a tin are some of my favorite treats.
My grandfather and I often went fishing and ate sardines with saltine crackers and real Amish butter(we live near a small ordnung).
My grandmother used to make a fluffy canned salmon and mashed potato croquettes that she served with a cream sauce with little peas and those little pearl onions.
She was from Germany lots of little croquettes with potatoes and meats and sauces. Parsley sauce is a really good one.
@@Emeraldwitch30, nice memories.
But I have had coworkers act as though I brought poison into work even though I always clean the tin and any utensils before discarding them. I literally had to take the trash bag out of the office after one coworker made such a ruckus about my kippers, even though I washed the tin including the lid with soap and the fork I used. Then she said there was something wrong with me to eat food that smells and tastes like ass!
I was fed up and just asked how she knew how ass smells and tastes.
Goodness I do love mussels and those look awesome, thanks Ben and Barry for reviewing those, I might get them, especially since they are canned ;o
They really were delicious!
@@SortedFood You replied I can die now!.......after I had those canned mussels
In South Africa we flour batter and fry fish before pickling it, the flour batter helps absorb some of the curry pickling liquid while also protecting the fish so it remains white and fresh in flavour.
I grew up in the mountains far from sea so tinned fish (or frozen) was much easier to find than fresh.
Battered fish (usually herring, but other sea fish work too) marinated in vinegar is a thing in Poland, so that doesn't surprise me at all.
Here in the Pacific Northwest of the USA our coasts are pretty rich with razor clams. They are bigger than those in your tin and they really do have two distinct parts. Shucking and rinsing them is a lot of work, but they make fantastic chowder, fry up beautifully, and are also pretty good steamed.
Marine biologist checking in, while they're both called razor because of the shape resembling a straight razor, pacific razor clams and atlantic razor clams are entirely unrelated clams. The european razor clams and East coast America/canada razor clams are the same genus, different species, though.
I adore tinned seafood. I can have seafood for myself without the hassle of getting it and cooking it, smelling up the house. I can have them in the house and enjoy them or do something with them. I adore Sardines in all forms, octopus, squid, Shellfish. In different oils, sauces, combinations. I hope more people give it a try and search out top quality that is sustainable, delicious seafood.
This is the ONLY channel on which I will actually watch a review of tinned fish *shudders*! Thanks for keeping it entertaining, gentlemen, and 'see' you tomorrow!
I'm really digging the dives into tinned and frozen foods 😊
Feeling all the good feelings being from Galicia
And when I realized you were trying to pronounce xoubas, I died a little. It is sardines in Galician, because we have our own language :)
My favourite canned seafood are zamburiñas. They are like tiny scalops.
*chef's kiss*
Are they right with the whole battered thing? I have a feeling they are mistaking fine onions for batter.
@@ChicoCabra yes, they are covered in flour, and then fried. Also, there are onion pieces in the sauce.
my dad lives near the Espinaler cannery! It has a large shop front and small restaurant and all they serve is different kinds of tinned fish, cured meats, beer and vermouth and it is always excellent.
This was fascinating and came at a good time. We just did a sampler from our local cheese shop and it came with Italian tinned sardines with ratatouille (tomato, eggplant, onion, carrot in ours I think). My wife and I weren't fans, but it was because it still struck us as pretty 'fishy'. I'd love to try the razor clams and will have to keep an eye out for those.
If you like scallops then you'll love razor clams. They're sweeter & better tasting in my mind. They're also great raw, if you're collecting them from a clean beach you just pull off the brown bits & the digger foot pulls off easily.
@@Getpojke Thanks friend! I've been able to try them before, but I'll have to keep an eye out for the tin. We don't get too many imports in Kansas City, but if you keep an eye out now and then you get lucky.
Going on my 16th of work straight and couldn’t be happier to see this video to keep me awake! Yes!
What a wonderful bit of fun tasting experience.
I nearly skipped this because I literally cannot stomach seafood, but once again you guys really gave me an appreciation for something I wouldn't actually experience this way.
Shopping Spree! I ordered all of your tins via Amazon. 😂 Every time you showcase foods/products, I start shopping. What I really want is Barry’s PRETENTIOUS sweatshirt! See you all this weekend. 🎉❤
im absolutely over the moon to see fish liver in here! Tinned cod liver is one of my absolute favourite things, it's eaten in Iceland, Spain and Russia and it's so good!
The brines from the ones canned in such make for excellent broth even for cooking in a sauce. I’d cook the sauce then add only the brine for water and flavor before dressing the fish in said sauce.
I grew up in South Germany where there is actually no fish -- yes there are some sweetwater fish, but not seawater fish that you get at the coast. So I only knew tinned fish or breaded fish fingers or fillets. No matter if they are yummy or not, they are good childhood memories. Oh, my childhood memories go back to times when Ebbers' parents were (presumably) not even close to even think about their relationship.
I don’t mean to be rude, and I speak German so I understand how you came to your conclusion, aber Süßwasser heißt „freshwater“ auf Englisch. And I never realized until now how funny sweetwater sounds 😂
@@-_pi_- No offense taken. I actually know this, but at that moment that word didn't come to the keyboard. Thank you for bringing that word back to my mind. 👍
@@-_pi_-than you should also know it's "southern Germany" 😂
@@josefhahn4599 Yeah but one is like, categorically wrong. Saying south Germany is something a native speaker could also do. No native English speaker would say sweetwater.
Monkfish liver - Ankimo (あん肝) is my favorite beer food. In Japan it is served with ponzu. The season are around fall and winter. Ooarai, is a town that specializes in Monkfish dishes and they have the tastiest Ankimo. They are also known as Foie Gras of the Sea.
Anchovies from Santoña, Spain are amazing and a must try…when I travel back to Spain, I always bring Santoña anchovies with me back to the States. Santoña is in Northern Spain, also Cantabrian.
I love mussels in italian restaurants in tomato or white wine brooth and simple white bread, nithing else needed.
But I always shied away from canned mussles, now I finally found my courage and buy a can in the mid price segment and I really love it. So thank you so much to push me in tge right direction to try.
I saw a documentary a couple of years ago on tinned seafood, mostly from Spain and Portugal, IIRC. It was really enlightening.
Great experience. These simple tins are considered a delicacy in Spain and Portugal.
Watch out for mussels (mejillones en escabeche) when there are only 3-5 pieces per tin. Very pricey but the mussels will be XXXL size and simply delicious.
Also squid or octopus in various sauces are always a special treat.
At the top you will find oysters, sea urchins and as shown razor clams.
I'm from Spain but I live in the UK... When I visit I always bring a few cans of mussels 😁 You can buy them everywhere, although maybe not that specific one, that looks fancy 😅 BTW, the way I eat them is with a piece of bread and enjoying the sauce/oil and mussels, that's it
Plus Worcestershire sauce as well. Try it.
Pre Brexit I used to get a care package including mussels
Nada como unos mejillones en escabeche encima de una patata frita acompañado de una buena caña de cerveza.
@@stigmarestroom una zamburiña también podría valer 🤤
I'm in Toronto, Canada 🇨🇦. Getting tinned fish is pretty easy to get here, but I must try more of these.
My favorit tinned fish here in Sweden is maceral fillet in a rich tomato sous. Just put it on some hard bread and enjoy. Or salmon buns in a lobster sous. Scrape of the sous and ad it to some béchamel for extra sous. Coat the fish in bread crumbs and fry them and serve with potatoes.
OK, so far 2 for 2... Love it!!! It's a yes for the last 2... I'm all in!
The monkfish liver is quite popular in Middle-Eastern Europe, too! I used to love it as a kid so much that I once got like twenty cans for Christmas from my parents :D (as a joke, but I was overjoyed, lol). We also used to take it with us for festival and camping, since it was easy to scoop from the can with a piece of bread
I tried pickled mussels last week, and I was actually surprised how moreish they were.
The great thing about a sorted video is even when the boys are tasting a category of food I can’t stand, I still really enjoy watching & always learn something (but still never trying anything resembling “moussey-tuna 😮😂)
This is the first time i get to see one of your LIVE events! I'm so SO excuted!! So much love, from Canada 🇨🇦🍁.
I love a tinned smoked oyster. Sardines packed in hot sauce on toast is a solid meal, as well.
I would love to have seen roasted eels in this lineup -- my favorite tinned fish. I was chowing down on a tin of them for lunch at work one day, and a Jamaican coworker had a conniption over it, telling me "ya eat from dat tin and ya gonna get ptomaine poisonin' an' die." Quaint fellow. He was made redundant a few weeks later.
It's very easy to make a simple spread with tined sardines or mackerel, with whipped cream, lemon, cappers etc... So good
Looking forward to watching the on demand weekend.
In Germany, we have liver of cod in tin with oil. My moms' family loved always fish, and she shows me that. You can put it in salad . I love it pure with toast. 😊
Razor clams are fantastic! Haven't seen them in a tin before. Please do another episode, there must be more gems like these.
They make good clam chowder fresh, no sure about canned.
My Pop loved all tins of fish, but the rest of the family stuck with tuna. As a grown up, I've tried some, but haven't been impressed. Thanks for doing this VIDEO! I'm learning a lot. 😊
Fish and seafood is something I never liked as a child, but as I grow increasingly aware of the enormous diversity I’m making an effort to try more of. These seem like a brilliant way to do that, as my ‘enjoyment’ isn’t hinged on cooking them properly. I’m interested in the monkfish liver especially.
That last Bennuendo was just amazingly done
Razor clams all the way!! My husband is originally from Washington State and got to grow up clamming every season (when red tide allowed) and razor clams were his favorite thing in the world. Battered and fried, cooked in clam chowder or from a can even; it's instant nostalgia for him. We go back to visit from time to time but I got to have my first crack at clamming a few years ago to get my own fresh when we flew out there and 🤤 they're worth every penny. There's shops down by the beaches that sell canned razor clams in the off seasons and I also got to pack a bag full of them for my return home so I could have some for special occasions!
Fascinating stuff.
If only there was something like that coming soon to the BBC in a brand new drama series: MONKFISH LIVER! A tough, uncompromising pate...
Welcome to the wonderful spanish world of canned seafood. A big piece of our culture.
I love all tinned seafood and always have. I repurpose the empty tins to create art. I mainly create fish ponds. Sometimes in a sculpted landscape or just in the tin alone. I miss the key style lids 😢 Heidi
Razor clams are huge in Southern Chinese cuisine. Lovely simply steamed or scrambled with eggs and scallions!
Try south Indian packed food(eg tasty nibbles) the have canned Indian fish curry
Living in Australia means accessing some of these could be difficult, but watching you taste these tinned delights was wonderful
We have tuna Tuesday in our house. It's for the cat. The cat literally screams when my daughter opens the tin. 😂
Try torske rogn on Rye bread with remoulade ! You can get it from the skandi kitchen in London its a Scandinavian meal Or just try torske rogn fryed
Great video! Now you need to do a tinned fish date night contest! Like a pass it on, but you have to use tinned fish in each recipe!!❤❤❤❤
I love monkfish liver, and often get it from my favorite Japanese restaurant or market! Never thought to look for it in a tin before, but now I’ll have to! 🙂
Just bought my tickets for the whole weekend event. Looking forward to it as I'm laid up in bed injured at the moment.
Hope it goes well & the team has fun doing it.
I was always confused as to why I would always see tempura shrimp or really tempura anything sitting in a bowl of ramen.... but I guess it's not always about it being super crispy.
Also, I love the bones in any tinned fish 🐟
Love tinned seafood! USA has some nice offerings but I honestly love the simple sardines/kippered herring, and Goya brand octopus ans squid. Yum!!!
Ebbers' face when he said "take a mouthful" when talking about falling off a surfboard 😂😂😂
I've ended up discovering a few creators on tiktok who have a lot of premium tinned fish and the variety out there is incredible.
I really hope there are more episodes of this
Hahaha. When I saw the title I was curious about whether I'll discover something new or not because I'm from somewhere with a big tin fish culture only to discover all cans came from where I'm from 😂😂. So I knew them all (and have tried them all, even if not from the same brand). It was interesting seeing the guys discovering something I'm so familiar with, and Ben was right, they're great for when you want to go camping or to the beach or pool to have a little snack with some vermú or manzanilla and you don't have to worry about how long they will keep (specially considering how hot the summers can get). And there are enough cans left for another video indeed. Can't wait to see what you guys will do with it.
There were a couple of surprises, there! Delish!
This was a great video. Seeing fish related content is always interesting, seems like there's always a new fish, or part of fish to explore and learn about!
You should have one video on East Asian tinned seafood as well as another about Southeast Asian ones. There's such a variety of products, flavours and prices there to choose from, you could probably even have a whole series on Asian tinned seafood!
I love these canned food taste tests, would love to see more! There's some weird and wonderful. How about revieeing some super cheap stuff?
Haha guys, Xoubas is pronounced "show-bas" sort of. Love that you guys are spreading the love on Spanish foods!
On the topic of monkfish, I'd love to see the chefs (or normals) try to prepare one the traditional Japanese method with it hanging from a hook, that'd be interesting to watch!
If you're going to do this again, I'd recommand trying the tins from La Belle-Iloise, a french brand specialized in gourmet tinned seafood.
I always hated tinned fish other than tuna. But when I was staying with a Karen homestay in Thailand I began to love tinned tomato mackerel, they mixed it with chili and just ate it with rice but it was such a good lunch time meal
Hi Sweden here , I order Foie gras once every year before xmas And their cheapest can (duck) is 12:- english Pounds and i would love to try the monkfish one. SO thank you for the information about it.
A pleasure to be featured on your channel, best wishes and cheers 🥰
I'm fortunate to live in the Pacific Northwest and we can harvest Razor Clams a few times a year. But the canned version is pretty great too
Always have a selection of tinned fish at home for a quick stir in to pasta or a salad topper
I would love to see more tinned fish, there are many more kinds, including the ones in glass jars. And please, have a beer or wine for the boys!
BTW, in most Northern European countries you can get the tin fish liver in various forms (also smoked, natural, and with herbs). As for the battered fish, Poland is expert at this.
Paired with good bread and a side of whole sweet pickled cucumber , it is a delight!
Give it another try....
You missed the opportunity to try berberechos... With Espinaler sauce, a staple vermouth side plate. (Espinaler was originally know by it's sauce, used mostly for tinned fish, but now they also sell selected tinned "vermouth" products, like the razor clams )
Not sure if in the rest of Spain, but in Catalonia the typical weekend apperitive is a vermouth with berberechos, mussels (Or any other canned seafood) and crisps.
Mmm....ankimo. I rarely find monkfish liver at restaurants but I enjoy it when I do. I didn't know it was available canned. Will have to look for it!
Mussels are cooked slowly in spiced oil with a technique called escabeche. They are amazing!