Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Canned Sardines




I had my second sardine sandwich this week. Yum. I think I found a new canned protein friend.

I really liked canned fish when I was little, my sister reminded me the other day. I used to eat kippers straight from the can with a fork.

My first sardine sandwich was the result of a google search for sardine sandwich, and it came from this blog. It was one side sardines mixed with sauted mushrooms, onions, and garlic, and then a little olive oil, lemon juice, and salt and pepper. On the other side of the bread was melted cheese. I heated both sides in the oven.

The bread I was eating was too thick, the cheese wasn't strong enough, but the sardine mixture was delicious. I also tried to eat this sandwich with lettuce which was a big flop because the lettuce was wilting between the halves pathetically. I pulled out the lettuce and tried to eat as much sardine as possible.

My second sardine sandwich was much more of a success. I ate it on untoasted sourdough bread with lettuce and mustard. This can of sardines was packed in tomato sauce, which I've read is common for sardines that come from Mexico or if they are packed in Thailand. I still added some olive oil and lemon juice to the mix, which was a good call because the lemon seemed to balance the acid in the tomatoes to make a more mild flavor.

On the downside, these sardines were cheaper and more gritty than the previous can I purchased.

I was worried about the mercury content being high in sardines like tuna, but I read on the internet that the sardine's low status on the food chain makes it far less of a risky fish to eat. They contain less mercury because their lives are shorter, and they don't eat other fish who contain mercury like predatory fish such as tuna.

Also in terms of the food chain, sardines are incredibly sustainable. When you eat predators, you are eating a larger chunk out of the food chain, but since sardines are bottom feeders, they reproduce faster, and there are more of them to eat. Eating bottom feeders impacts bio-diversity less.

Cheap, low mercury levels, non-perishable, environmentally sustainble, high in omega-threes and delicious. Oh sardines, I think this the beginning of a beautiful friendship.

1 comment:

withmuchgusto said...

Yeah a protein friend to keep around is exactly how I look at Sardines too!A very healthy food.
Check out this sandwhich I eat.
It is the most basic.
Put mayo on two slices of bread add sardines in-place-of regualr cold cuts and BAM you have a sardine sandwhich!
If you get the sardines in Mustard sauce the mustard is like ading mustard to your sandwhich already.
In my experience mustard sauce can be bitter types of mustard so go ahead and add some regular squeeze bottle type yellow mustard to the sandwhich.
I have even taken a mustard sauce packed sardine can added yellow mustard,some cilantro in place of lettuce,squeeze fresh lime over top,and you can add optionally a slice of fresh white onion to the sandwhich or on the side optionally,and enjoy.
These sandwhiches will make your breath stink,but they are very healthy.

Blog Widget by LinkWithin