BROPHY BROS. VENTURA
The coronavirus pandemic has turned daily life on its head: the corner office has given
way to the kitchen table, and the classroom has been supplanted by the computer
screen. Dining patterns have been similarly disrupted, as consumers have rediscovered
their stovetops and ovens.
A major beneficiary of this shift has been seafood, which Nielsen reports was the fastest
growing supermarket category during the last week of May. Buoyed by escalating meat
and poultry prices, purchase volumes jumped a whopping 48% over the previous week
and 26% over the prior 13-week period, offering restaurants the opportunity to use fish
and shellfish as the base for some intriguing menu innovations.
Because Americans are often unfamiliar and/or intimidated by the prospect of
preparing seafood at home, they have traditionally opted to leave seafood preparation to
chefs. This has proved to be a major boon to chefs who are stepping up their seafood
game and coming up with innovative take-out selections.
Restaurants like Bellagreen, an eight-unit, fast-casual operation based in Plano, Texas,
have come up with summer specials like paleo mango salmon tacos, made with trendy
tajin — the Mexican chile-and-lime combination seasoning — then topped with
shredded jicama, fresh mango, cucumber and mixed cabbage. It’s served with cilantro
and citrus-honey vinaigrette atop an almond-flour tortilla.
In Huntington Beach, Calif, the Lazy Dog Restaurant & Bar is serving their newly
created sesame crusted Ahi Tuna finished with a coconut-curry cream sauce, while the
ginger soy salmon dish sports a sweet soy glaze, stir-fried vegetables, sesame seeds,
green onions and steamed rice.
In New Orleans, restaurants like Molly’s Rise & Shine, are offering diners sardines and
bagel chips, which includes a deluxe tin of sardines, hot cherry peppers, chimichurri
cream cheese, capers and red onions — a sly take on the classic bagel-and-schmear
combo.
Looking ahead, attractive specials like these are being designed to reel in pantry-
fatigued patrons seeking an excuse to put down their frying pans and enjoy can’t-miss,
can’t-make-at-home seafood dishes.
BROPHY BROS. VENTURA
Photo Credit Kcruts Photography
1559 SPINNAKER DR. VENTURA, CA 93001
805-639-0865
BROPHY BROS. VENTURA