Spending some time here at Underøy I’m really beginning to open my eyes to what an abundant source of delicious things the sea really is. In the last five days I’ve caught a cod, a bucket full of crabs and another bucket full of mussels. All this is food that I would have to pay pretty dearly for back in Oslo and all food that I love. I love seafood - pretty much all fish as well as crabs, mussels, lobster, prawns, shrimp, calamari… It all tastes so fresh and lovely, and it needs so little in terms of spices or flavour enhancers. Plus it tastes healthy. Anyone else think so? To me, seafood somehow comes outside of the normal food thing where calories, fat content and carbohydrates count for anything. When it comes to seafood, all that matters is the lovely flavours. In fact, I know nothing about the fat content in any seafood except that I’ve heard somewhere that salmon is full of the good fatty acids.

And this place… it must be what heaven is like. I never imagined being able to just walk out the door, a few metres down to the water’s edge carrying a bucket, and pick tonight’s dinner! It’s right there, just outside the house walls! And if I feel like fish, all we have to do is jump in the boat which is also right there and with some luck we’ll come home with all the fish we could dream of. Or crabs, all you need is a bucket, a rake and a flashlight, and then take the boat out to one of the many little islets scattered around, and just pick them up from the side of the rock. Boil them in sea water, and eat.
It’s the simplicity of it which gets me. Good seafood is something of a luxury in Oslo, which is such a shame because when prepared properly it becomes such an amazing gourmet meal, every time. And now that it’s so available, I feel… I don’t quite know how to describe it. All I know is I feel happy inside, and that I don’t really want to go back to having to buy frozen shellfish and checking the ‘fresh’ fish I buy to see if it’s really fresh. It’s so different when you’ve caught it yourself: you’ve pulled it out of the sea, you’ve killed it, you’ve pulled out its guts, you know the exact amount of time it’s been dead before you cook and eat it and… well, it’s just amazing. Oh and I forgot — It’s free! How brilliant is that!

Our fishing trip last night was good, if not too much of a success i terms of catch: Trond got a pretty small pollock which I fryed up in some butter when we got home, and we all snacked on it. But I didn’t get anything. Trond also got a weird little thing called Horngjel (Garfish), which was thin and spiky and according to The Boyfriend can really hurt you when you try to unhook it. Luckily this one got loose on its own whilst we were doing a little photoshoot to document the cool catch.

When we got back, I felt pretty bad about coming back empty handed, so I took a little walk around the bay outside the house and picked my first ever mussels. I didn’t know how much to get so I picked a whole bucket full, which weighed in at 7,5 kg. I quickly realised that that’s way too much for two people to eat, possibly even a lot for seven or eight! (I read afterwards that 1 kg mussels per person is an appropriate portion size for an entree) So after I’d cleaned them all — which took me an hour– I threw 2/3 of them back into the bay.

I wanted to make them for dinner today, and as The Boyfriend is not known to be crazy about seafood I decided to do a tomato/red wine broth instead of just steaming them in white wine which I believe is the more traditional way of preparing them. I also made some oven potatoes just in case The Boyfriend didn’t love the meal enough to fill up on the scrumptious little mussels. Although actually, they were pretty big..

He turned out to love it almost as much as I did, in fact. It must have been the broth, which I’m very pleased with! Tomato, onion, garlic and red wine, a little thyme, and some carrots and the mussles on top. Delicious! You can find the recipe under the Seafood category…