Seafood & Fish
2025 recipes found

Corn and Cod Green Curry
In this light, Thai-inspired curry, a trio of sweet ingredients — corn, coconut milk and fish — pair with the fruity and fragrant aromatics of green curry paste, which includes green chiles, lemongrass and galangal. Finishing with lime, basil and thinly sliced bok choy further brightens each bite. (The bok choy is cooked only a bit so that its crunchy stems and silky greens provide contrasting textures.) Instead of fresh corn, you can substitute 5 cups of frozen and unthawed corn kernels. Serve the curry on its own or with rice or rice noodles.

Malaay Qumbe (Coconut Fish Curry)
Variations of coconut fish curry abound up and down the Swahili Coast, so much so that the dish is often broadly referred to as East African fish curry. Although Somalia has the longest coastline in mainland Africa, seafood is not a prominent part of mainstream Somali cuisine. But you’ll find malaay qumbe in coastal Somali towns. This version of coconut fish curry leans heavily on xawaash, a spice blend that is at the heart of Somali cuisine. The mild heat from the xawaash’s black pepper balances beautifully with the sweet, cooling coconut milk and the acidity from the tomatoes. Serve over plain white rice, or soak up the creamy coconut gravy with a flatbread like muufo. Malaay qumbe would also work well on top of soor for a hearty meal of creamy spiced coconut fish and grits.

Slow-Cooker Jalapeño Pulled Pork
This four-ingredient recipe draws inspiration from carnitas, barbecue pulled pork and Vietnamese caramel pork for sticky, sweet and spicy pulled meat. Braising browned pork shoulder in a slow cooker in pickled jalapeño brine and fish sauce tenderizes the meat and adds savory depth. Part of the cooking liquid then simmers with brown sugar and pickled jalapeño slices for a glaze to drape over pull-apart, crispy-edged meat. Eat over rice, tortillas or burger buns.

Cod, Celery and Potato Stew With Coconut and Herbs
Celery is one of those vegetables that has a lot of unrealized potential. It is usually served raw to accentuate its crunch, or used as a flavor base in stocks then plucked out and discarded. But braising celery, as this recipe does, awakens another texture, creating a silkiness that is often overlooked but deserves to be prized. Celery’s fibers — which go from stringy to silky when simmered — are also great for absorbing flavor. Here, the celery slowly tenderizes in the flavorful broth, absorbs the briny richness of clam juice and coconut milk and turns positively lush. Since the celery is the star of the show, you can swap out the cod for shrimp or tofu.

Roasted Cod With Burst Tomatoes and Olives
In this effortless one-skillet meal, cod fillets are simply pan-roasted — basted in butter on the stovetop — then gently finished in a moderate oven to guarantee even cooking and tender, flaky fish. While the cod rests, the flavorful pan juices quickly turn into a bright, lemony sauce with sweet cherry tomatoes, briny olives, tangy capers and fragrant dill. The balance of buttery richness and bright acidity in the sauce complements the mild seafood, but this dish is versatile: Hake, halibut or some other similarly mellow white fish would also work nicely.

Steamed Salmon with Ginger, Green Garlic, Potatoes & Miso
A rich filet of salmon gets dressed up with a delicate sauce of fresh ginger, green garlic, and umami-packed miso.

Parmesan-Crusted Salmon Caesar Salad
This fast weeknight recipe uses your favorite store-bought mayonnaise and bottled fish sauce in an easy Caesar dressing. And then, in an even more resourceful move, it uses that same dressing to coat salmon fillets, to help prevent overcooking, and to adhere a Parmesan crust. As the fillets broil, the layer of cheese bubbles and caramelizes to form a crispy, salty coating, a texture that only enhances the crisp lettuce. (For a vegetarian version, you can also use this method on avocado halves.)

Smoked Mackerel, Lettuce and Tomato Sandwich
Summertime is the season of the tomato sandwich, and few are more revered than the BLT. Smoky bacon, mayonnaise and juicy, umami-rich tomatoes make it as close to a perfect sandwich as possible. Changing out the bacon for smoked mackerel results in an entirely different experience, albeit just as satisfying. The richness and smoke of the mackerel are both excitingly novel and familiar enough to prompt you to pop cans of tinned fish any time you procure fresh tomatoes from the farmers’ market.

Smoky Shrimp Saganaki
Inspired by Greek shrimp saganaki, this dish combines wonderfully sweet shrimp, tomatoes and feta with subtly smoky dried Mexican chiles. The aromatics — cherry tomatoes and garlic, plus an assortment of dried and fresh chiles — simmer and confit in oil in the oven, with shrimp and feta added toward the end of cooking, broiling quickly, to create a wonderfully oozy, charred dish. It’s a simple, one-pan weeknight meal that cooks in just 30 minutes. This recipe allows flexibility in your choice of chiles; whichever you choose, the gentle confiting of the chiles releases their flavors, adding nuanced heat to complement the bright and tangy tomatoes and feta. You can switch out the ancho chile for pasilla chile, or dial up the heat with a fruity Scotch bonnet. Enjoy this dish straight from the pan, mopped up with a piece of crusty bread. Any leftovers can be easily turned into a show-stopping pasta sauce, making this recipe a versatile addition to any recipe collection.

Salmon and Kimchi Skillet
Sautéing kimchi brings out its mellower side: a delicious, cabbage-y sweetness. In Korean cuisine, stir-fried kimchi (kimchi-bokkeum) is a classic staple served with rice. In this recipe, the kimchi is cooked in a fragrant mix of butter and toasted sesame oil along with just a touch of sugar, making a four-ingredient seasoning and sauce for salmon filets. Often, jarred cabbage kimchi is already chopped into large bite-size pieces, so you can simply empty the jar into the skillet. If your kimchi has very long or unwieldy pieces of cabbage, you may want to use kitchen scissors to snip them up in the jar (or chop it on a cutting board). Serve the salmon and kimchi with rice.

Chermoula Potato and Fish Stew
This dish features tender potatoes and flaky fish fillets simmered in Moroccan chermoula, a fragrant marinade bursting with fresh parsley, cilantro, lemon and garlic, and complemented by warm spices. In Moroccan cuisine, chermoula is used to marinate meat and fish before grilling; it can be also served as a sauce drizzled over vegetables or any number of cooked dishes. Here, the chermoula and potatoes are cooked first, creating a flavorful base for the fish, resulting in a satisfying one-pan meal. The optional harissa oil comes together in no time and is highly recommended if you like heat and crave complexity. To make the chermoula, this recipe calls for finely chopped herbs, but feel free to pulse the herbs and garlic in a food processor, if you prefer.

Salt-and-Vinegar Baked Fish and Chips
There’s nothing quite like the savory pucker of a salt and vinegar potato chip. Those flavors are applied to these fish and chips, baked in the oven for workday ease. Don’t be afraid of white vinegar: Its bracing, unadulterated acidity makes flaky white fish taste so good. Vinegar’s tartness also helps offset the richness of the fried potatoes. Reminiscent of a seafood shack dinner, this dish includes a makeshift tartar sauce that both marinates the fish and serves as a dip. It stars dill in all its glory, as an herb that reinforces the joyful sharpness of salt and vinegar.

Baked Fish With Slow-Cooked Peppers
Meaty fish like striped bass, swordfish and halibut make good choices for pairing with the late-season vegetable harvest, specifically sweet peppers. Whether you use standard bell peppers, Italian “frying” peppers or some wonderful shapely variety, like corno di toro, cut them in half vertically, right through the stem, then remove the veins and seeds (as opposed to cutting off the tops first). That way, you’ll be able to make long slices, without any oddly sized leftover bits.

Pork & Shrimp Grilled Quesadillas with Cucumber Salad
Quesadillas, but add a touch of Asian flair. We mixed ground pork and shrimp with teriyaki sauce, then sandwiched the filling between two tortillas and grilled until golden brown and toasty.

Grilled Napa Caesar with Shrimp, Peanuts & Panko
Wedges of Napa cabbage are grilled until tender but still fresh and crisp, then drizzled with a creamy Caesar-style dressing and juicy, grilled shrimp.

Orzo Vongole With Zucchini
Inspired by the flavors of pasta alle vongole (spaghetti and clams with garlic), this brothy version features clams and orzo with sweet zucchini, which pairs particularly well with briny shellfish. The littlenecks steam open and release all of their wonderful liquor, which later gets readily absorbed by the pasta. A final swirl of butter and Parmesan creates a lovely silky sauce, studded with flecks of fresh parsley. When cooking with fresh clams, give them a good scrub to shed any grit and discard any clams that have cracked shells or are open before cooking. If fresh clams are hard to come by, you can substitute them with two (6-ounce) cans of whole clams; if the canned liquid tastes good, you can use it in place of the bottled clam juice.

Garlicky Shrimp Tacos
A nod to gambas al ajillo, the immensely popular Spanish tapas dish of garlic prawns, this recipe tucks garlic shrimp into festive tacos that can be on the dinner table in 30 minutes. There are very few ingredients involved, but they all pack a punch. The quick-cooking shrimp are seared and finished in olive oil that’s infused with lots of fragrant garlic and rich smoky paprika. Be sure to save the robust oil that’s left in the skillet and enjoy it drizzled over your tacos. Dress them up with crisp sliced radishes, creamy avocado, spicy pico de gallo and fresh, herbaceous cilantro, plus a final squeeze of lime to brighten all the flavors.

Maryland Crab Soup
While the exact origins of Maryland crab soup are unknown, the recipe is rooted in folk tradition, likely learned from Indigenous people, and changed over time depending on what was available and in season. You’ll find different recipes on menus in restaurants and homes throughout the Chesapeake Bay area, but you can usually assume the tomato-based soup is likely to contain corn, beans, peas and tomatoes. Seek out Maryland blue crab meat, prized for its sweetness thanks to the time the crustacean spends swimming in the brackish waters of the bay. While stock always adds a more robust flavor to soups, water will work fine as well for this hearty, vegetable-heavy recipe.

Peel and Eat Shrimp
This quick peel and eat recipe yields plump, juicy, extraflavorful shrimp by gently poaching shell-on shrimp in a combination of beer, butter and spices. Starting the shrimp in the cold poaching liquid allows them to cook gradually and evenly as the liquid heats up. A simple combination of beer, butter, celery salt, cayenne and paprika builds flavor, but feel free to substitute your favorite seafood seasoning to flavor the poaching liquid. By deveining the shrimp, you’ll remove the digestive tract and create an opening along the back, which makes them easier to peel once cooked. Peel and eat the shrimp while they’re still warm, dipping them in drawn butter or cocktail sauce, or cool them down and enjoy them cold, as you would for shrimp cocktail.

Golden Diner’s Tuna Melt
This tuna melt, which was adapted from Sam Yoo, the owner and chef of Golden Diner in New York, is almost more about the textures than the tuna: Two slices of rye bread, crisped in butter and adorned with melted American cheese, sandwich a hefty scoop of tuna salad and a fistful of salt-and-vinegar potato chips. The sandwich will crunch, audibly, as you smash it together, and again between your teeth as you eat it. But the tuna salad is equally memorable: Reminiscent of the flavors of a Big Mac, its tangy, mayo-based sauce gets a hefty dose of acidity from minced bread and butter pickles, mustard, vinegar and Tabasco. This tuna melt eats like a tuna grilled cheese and proves that the best sandwiches are all about contrast: hot and cold, buttery and tangy, crispy and creamy.

Oven-Seared Salmon With Corn and Tomatoes
This one-pan dinner pairs browned fish with a colorful salad of charred corn, tomatoes, scallions, herbs and lime, proving that summer cooking is best when you get out of the way of the ingredients. The salmon develops a crisp crust without requiring a sear on the stovetop thanks to a light coating of mayonnaise and the direct scorch of the broiler. You won’t taste the mayonnaise; instead, it’s there to caramelize the salmon’s surface while insulating the delicate flesh. Corn kernels cook alongside just long enough to plump, sweeten and char in spots. The salmon and salad are a meal unto themselves, or you could accompany them with quinoa or garlic bread.

Siu Mai
A mainstay of dim sum, siu mai are open-faced steamed dumplings filled with juicy, seasoned pork, and sometimes shrimp and shiitake mushrooms, like in this version. Dim sum, a variety of small dishes meant to be shared, roughly means heart’s delight in Cantonese. Its origins are thought to date back to the tea houses along the Silk Road in Southern China where weary travelers shared small bites of food alongside their tea. Unlike other more intricate dumplings, wrapping siu mai is not too fussy. For their signature buttery hue, use round, yellow dumpling wrappers, sometimes labeled “Hong Kong Style.” Adding cornstarch to the meat filling is a Chinese culinary technique called velveting, which ensures the meat is juicy with a silken, velvety texture. For added contrast, add chopped water chestnuts to the filling. Top the siu mai with fish roe (or finely chopped carrot) for a pop of color, and serve with black vinegar, soy sauce and chile paste for dipping.

Lobster Rolls
There are two longstanding, popular styles of lobster rolls, and they differ in two primary ways: temperature (cold versus warm) and sauce (mayonnaise versus butter). One style hails from Maine, where chilled lobster meat is tossed in a mayonnaise dressing (often with minced celery and chives), while the Connecticut version warms lobster meat in butter and serves it glistening in the butter sauce. These rolls embrace the best of both worlds and are both buttery and bright. The lobster meat is warmed in butter, quickly tossed in a light mayo dressing, then tucked into butter-toasted buns. Serve with potato chips and tangy coleslaw for a classic summer meal.

Connecticut-Style Lobster Rolls
Connecticut-style lobster rolls celebrate the pure flavor of lobster, simply warming the cooked meat in melted butter to bring out its inherent sweetness and preserve its plump texture. (Maine-style typically serve chilled lobster meat tossed with mayonnaise.) The approach is simple: Toast your buns in butter until golden, then heat the cooked lobster in the same skillet just until warmed. The use of salted butter seasons the meat, so no extra salt is required (though seasoning to taste is never discouraged). Although the optional celery seed is not traditional, its herbal brightness nicely highlights the seafood flavor. Serve these lobster rolls with potato chips and tangy coleslaw for a classic summer meal.