Feed Me That logoWhere dinner gets done
previousnext


Title: Warm Lobster Tacos with Yellow Tomato Salsa
Categories: Appetizer Ethnic Seafood
Yield: 6 Servings

1 Lobster filling---
4 1 pound lobsters
6 7-inch fresh flour tortillas
1 (separate recipe)
3tbCorn oil
1cJalapeno jack cheese --
1 Grated
1cSpinach leaves -- shredded
1 Yellow tomato salsa---
1lbYellow tomatoes
1lgShallot -- very finely
1 Minced
1lgClove garlic -- very finely
1 Minced
2tbFresh cilantro -- very
1 Finely minced
1tbChampagne (or white wine)
1 Vinegar
2 Whole serrano chiles --
1 Seeded and minced
2tsLime juice
1 Salt -- to taste
1tbMaple syrup (optional) -- if
1 Not sweet enough
1 Jicama salad (separate
1 Recipe)

For the Lobster Filling: Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Fill a large stock pot with lightly salted water and bring to a boil over high heat. Add lobsters and cook for about 8 minutes or until just done. Drain and let lobsters cool slightly. Wrap tortillas tightly in foil and place in preheated 300 degree oven for about 15 minutes or until heated through. Keep warm until ready to use. Remove meat from lobster tails being careful not to tear it apart. Cut meat into thin medallions (or medium-sized dice, if meat breaks apart). Heat oil in a medium saute pan over medium heat and saute lobster medallions until just heated through. Spoon equal portions of warm lobster medallions into the center of each warm tortilla. Sprinkle with equal portions of grated cheese and shredded spinach. Roll tortillas into a cylinder shape and place each one on a warm serving plate with the edge facing the bottom. Surround the taco with Yellow Tomato Salsa and garnish each side with a small mound of Jicama Salad (separate recipe).

For the Yellow Tomato Salsa: In a food processor, using the steel blade, process tomatoes until well chopped. Do not puree. Combine tomatoes and their juices with shallot, garlic, cilantro, vinegar, chilies, lime juice, and salt, mixing well. Add maple syrup, if needed, to balance flavor and sweeten slightly. Cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours or until very cold. Note: For a crunchier, more typical salsa, put tomatoes through fine die of a food grinder.

Chef's Notes: "I created this dish in early 1986 and it quickly became my signature appetizer on The Mansion on Turtle Creek menu. The name 'Lobster Taco' perfectly illustrates the casual elegance that characterizes Southwest cuisine. Its appeal is rooted in the combination of rich lobster and a simple flour tortilla. The salsa and salad garnishes produce an explosion of color that promises exciting dining".

__The Mansion on Turtle Creek Cookbook__ by Dean Fearing, edited by Dotty Griffith, 1987.

Recipe By : Dean Fearing, __The Mansion on Turtle Creek Cookbook__

From:

previousnext