I first started cooking in my early 20's just after being married and aside from occasionally making myself some lunch in my school years, this new meal preparation was not only for me but for my new bride as well. Now I wasn't the only one cooking, she did her fair share in the beginning but had absolutely no for love for it. As for me, I definitely liked to try new recipes & techniques even though I surely didn't know what I was doing and clearly had know idea at the time the passion it would grow into.
One of the first dishes I made that we both enjoyed came from a recipe on the side of a pasta box. You could hardly call it cooking, boiling pasta and sautéing diced bacon. And I'm sure the word sauté was not even in my vocabulary at that time. Anyway this wonderfully tasty dish is Pasta Carbonara, smoky, salty(in a good way), creamy & rich. Other than the bacon and pasta, all you had to do was get butter, eggs & parmesan cheese to room temperature and toss it all together with the hot pasta, which cooks the eggs and thickens the sauce. just season with some freshly cracked black pepper & chopped parsley and you have yourself one fantastic, easy meal.
As fate would have it I ended up getting a culinary education and working in restaurant kitchens & over the years tried to use this knowledge and try to make this dish better. I tried a reduction sauce, a cream and egg liaison and other methods that in the end only made it more complicated to prepare but in no way any better, usually worse. So now I am back full circle to the early years of good tasting simplicity and I am certainly fine with that.
I was recently trying to use up some items in my freezer to make room for the upcoming and hopefully successful fishing & hunting seasons. One of the vaccu-sealed bags contained a nice Rainbow Trout that I caught last winter. Now trout isn't one of my favorite fish to eat but I do enjoy it smoked as well as the smoking process. Last season I used some to fill maki rolls and also to flavor a dish of Tomago Kake Gohan, a Japanese breakfast rice bowl that ironically uses hot rice to cook a raw egg. Looks like a theme here eh? So I thought why not use this brined & smoky fish as the bacon component of carbonara.
So I ended up using bacon as well because we all know bacon can't hurt anything right. I made the dish as I usually do, just added the trout. It was excellent, not fishy in any way. Trout can sometimes be described as stronger tasting but I think the smoke tends to soften up any fishiness. I certainly wouldn't hesitate doing this recipe again and although I only used half the trout I think I might like to try it in something else...Risotto maybe?


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