Salmon gets the hasselback treatment in this easy, weeknight dish

Hasselback Salmon

active time:20 mins

total time:35mins

Servings:4

active time:20 mins

total time:35mins

Servings:4

Comment

Ever have a friend who finds little ways to make life easier? She offers clever asides or makes astute observations that result in why-didn’t-I-think-of-that moments. The cookbook “Prep and Rally” by Dini Klein delivers that same feeling: Here’s someone who not only gets it, but wants to help you get it, too.

I found myself nodding and saying “so smart” as I flipped through her cookbook filled with organizing tips, detailed grocery lists, and specific food prep and cooking advice designed to help busy home cooks like Klein, a trained chef and working mother of three, get dinner on the table without sacrificing fun and flavour.

The book mirrors what Klein offers through her Prep + Rally family meal plan service. The gist: Pick four dishes to cook, make a solid grocery list, then spend an hour or so on one day (maybe Sunday) making sauces, sides and recipe building blocks so you can then quickly throw together dinner Monday through Thursday.

Even if, like me, you don’t feel the need to completely revamp your cooking habits, her cookbook delivers something you probably do want: fast, make-ahead recipes that don’t feel like retreads.

This hasselback salmon is my favorite example from the book. I chose this recipe from among the many tasty options because as much as I love salmon, I sometimes find myself falling back on buying fillets, pan searing them, and drizzling them with olive oil and lemon. Tasty, but sigh.

This one offered something differently delicious, but still quite simple. And you can assemble it the day before, wrap it up nice and tight in the fridge and bake it for 30 minutes the next night.

What’s fun about it? Rather than buying individual fillets, you get yourself a 2-pound slab of the fish. Then you hasselback it. That is, you take a sharp knife and make two rows of horizontal slits and one long slits down the center, using care not to cut through the skin underneath. Then you sprinkle it with garlicky parmesan breadcrumbs, tucking those savory bits in the slits.

The fish is drizzled with olive oil and lemon juice before it is slipped in the oven to crisp and turn golden. The fatty fish and cheese create a dish that is quite rich, so Klein serves it with a bright, clean-tasting chimichurri-style vinaigrette that can also be made a day or two ahead.

And the final little nugget that made me smile: Klein lightly oil broccoli florets on another baking sheet and tucks that into the oven in the last 15 minutes of cooking time to create a full meal. While the food is cooking, you can toss together a green salad, if you feel like it.

But Klein wasn’t finished. Don’t want the cheese or just want a variation? She recommends spreading a thin layer of honey mustard on the salmon before adding the breadcrumbs for a twist.

This dish, which got raves from my colleagues, is definitely now on my weeknight rotation, but it also might just become my next casual dinner-party main dish. It’s that pretty and that tasty. Try it.

Make Ahead: The fish can be sliced ​​and seasoned, tightly covered and refrigerated for up to 1 day in advance before baking.

Storage: Refrigerate the cooked fish for up to 2 days and the chimichurri vinaigrette for up to 3 days (the vinaigrette may lose its color).

NOTES: To make roasted broccoli or cauliflower to go along with the fish, line a large, rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper or lightly grease it. Arrange 1 pound (about 5 cups) of broccoli or cauliflower florets on the pan, drizzle with about 1 tablespoon of olive oil and toss to coat. Spread the broccoli in a single layer and lightly season with salt and pepper. Transfer the vegetables to the oven about 15 minutes before the salmon is supposed to be done and roast until the vegetables have softened slightly and begin to crisp on top. Serve with lemon wedges and grated parmesan on the side, if desired.

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  • One (2-pound) skin-on fillet of salmon, bones removed
  • 3/4 teaspoon fine salt, divided
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 lemon
  • 3/4 cup (2 1/2 ounces) finely grated parmesan cheese
  • 1/2 cup panko
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil (or more as needed) or cooking spray
  • 1 cup fresh parsley or cilantro, leaves and
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Meet The Next Class Of Forbes 30 Under 30 Listers Transforming The Food Industry

This year’s list highlights up-and-coming superstars from the world’s restaurants, farming, packaged food, alcohol and recipe development.

By Chloe Sorvino and Kristin Stollerwith Anthony Tellez


Qhe only has access to Nigerian food that Oluwakolapo Smith had in North Texas was a store 40 minutes away—a problem he says was felt by fellow Nigerian immigrants in the US

So in 2018, he dropped out of college to find direct-to-consumer Nigerian food and beverage box AllIDoIsCook, along with business partners Bethany Oyefeso. Today, they’ve shipped over 10,000 boxes of their meat pies and stews to more than 3,000 customers and expect to generate nearly $1 million in revenue this year.

Smith and Oyefeso are among this year’s stand-outs on the 2023 Forbes 30 Under 30 Food & Drink list, which highlights up-and-coming superstars from the worlds of restaurants, farming, packaged food, alcohol and recipe development who have persevered despite the odds. Their game-changing work should be watched.

To compile the 12th annual list, judges and Forbes reporters convened in-person to taste samples and discuss the candidates. Candidates were evaluated by a panel of judges featuring Kardea Brown, host of the Food Network’s Delicious Miss Brown Girl; Under 30 list of alumni Vanessa Pham, cofounder and CEO of Omsom; Randall Lane, Forbes’ chief content officer; and Lee Brian Schrager, founder, South Beach Wine & Food Festival. To be considered for this year’s list, all candidates had to be under the age of 30 as of December 31, 2022, and never before named to a 30 Under 30 list.

Despite the hardships the last year brought to the industry, four restaurants are featured on our 2023 list. That restaurant roster includes two chefs nominated for the 2022 James Beard Emerging Chef award: finalist Williamsburg, Brooklyn-based Bonnie’s chef Calvin Eng28; and semifinalists Shenarrie Freeman, 29, the executive chef of Cadence, a plant-based, Southern soul restaurant in New York’s East Village. In addition, there‘s 29-year-old Téa Ivanovicthe cofounder of Washington, DC-based Immigrant Food, and Jun Chothe 28-year-old behind seafood delivery-focused chain The Boil Daddy.

Cho started the fast-growing restaurant with just $30,000 of his own money in June 2020. The South Korean immigrant started with one restaurant in Downtown Los Angeles, but quickly decided to franchise the business, allowing franchisees to operate a brick and mortar restaurant with a full dining experience or operate in a ghost kitchen to minimize labor costs. Today, there are nine Boil Daddy restaurants throughout California and Texas that Cho projects will bring in $15 million in revenue in 2022, up from $5 million last year. Cho plans to expand to the East Coast, opening 20 locations by year end and 100 by 2023.

Many startups on this year’s list are harnessing emerging technologies to sustainably feed the world’s growing population. Gabriel Nipote27, Henry Michaelson26, and Spencer Price, 26 founded startup Halla to help food retailers predict what a shopper will want before they know they want it. With nearly $10 million in funding from Endless Frontier Labs, Food Retail Ventures and others, Halla has been deployed at over 3,000 ecommerce storefronts, which span multiple top 10 grocers in the US and Canada.

Creators on the 2023 list include Same Dadathe author of cookbook Love To Cook Itand Nicholas Norena, the Instagram sensation with the account @thesucculentbite. These are just a few of the young individuals who are creating companies and movements that will define 2023 and beyond.

This year’s list was edited by Kristin Stoller and Chloe Sorvino, with Anthony Tellez. For a link to our complete 2023 Under 30 Food & Drink list, click hereand for full 30 Under 30 coverage, click here.


Gallery: Callouts 30 Under 30 2023

20 images

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Bradenton area restaurants that aced health inspections

BurgerFi, a craft burger chain, opened a location in Lakewood Ranch earlier this year.

BurgerFi, a craft burger chain, opened a location in Lakewood Ranch earlier this year.

The Bradenton Herald regularly reports on local restaurants that don’t pass inspection by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation or otherwise raise concern due to food safety and cleanliness issues.

But over the past several years, readers have frequently asked which restaurants have done well during inspectors’ visits, too.

Passing inspection without flaw is no easy feat. Florida bases its inspection standards on the US Food and Drug Administration’s Food Code, which contains many, many possible violations. These Bradenton-area restaurants did more than pass their regular state inspection — they aced it.

Here are the restaurants and other food businesses that recently got perfect marks (no violations) or near-perfect marks (only a few minor violations) in Manatee County. These inspections were conducted between November 7-22, 2022.

AMC Bradenton 20, 2507 53rd Ave. E., Bradenton

Bigg Dogg BBQ LLC, 2910 63rd Ave. E., Bradenton

Buffalo Wild Wings, 4120 14th St. W., Bradenton

BurgerFi11563 SR 70 E., Bradenton (No violations)

Chipotle Mexican Grill11715 SR 70 E., Lakewood Ranch (No violations)

Culver’s4714 SR 64 E., Bradenton

Froggy’s Caribbean BBQ, 2525 27th St. E., Bradenton (Mobile food business) (No violations)

J&J Barbecue, 2505 Manatee Ave. E., Bradenton (Catering services)

Main Street Trattoria8131 Lakewood Main St., Lakewood Ranch

Super 8, 5218 17th St. E., Ellenton (No violations)

El Taco Loco, 6103 28th St. E., Bradenton (Mobile food business) (No violations)

Tacos Bertha, 2608 Ninth St. W., Bradenton (Food truck) (No violations)

Tandoor Fine Indian Cuisine8453 Cooper Creek Blvd., Bradenton

La Tentacion del Sabor, 639 10th St. E., Palmetto (Mobile food business) (No violations)

Wendy’s11727 Sr. 70 E., Bradenton

Restaurants in Florida are licensed and routinely inspected by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Diners can report health and cleanliness issues at a restaurant anywhere in the state by filing a complaint with the agency.

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Ryan Ballogg is a news reporter and features writer at the Bradenton Herald. Since joining the paper in 2018, he has received awards for features, art and environmental writing in the Florida Press Club’s Excellence in Journalism Competition. Ryan is a Florida native and graduated from the University of South Florida St. Petersburg.
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