Recipe Name: Mussels in White Wine and Garlic
Story: I can very vividly remember Aunt Julie teaching me how to make this in the early 2000s in the Snellville house and at her house in Decatur. I believe she learned this recipe from her trip to Italy and modified it a bit to her liking. For years when I would travel home for the holidays, I would stop by their house in Decatur on my way back to Nashville, and then go to the Dekalb Farmers Market, where I would pick up fresh mussels, place them in my cooler for the drive home, so that I could cook this recipe for dinner when I returned home. The recipe isn't very precise, because it is more about creating a nice steam / dipping sauce and just steaming the mussels. As such it is more of an "art" then a "science," which is one of the many things Julie taught me about cooking.
Years you've been making it: Since roughly 2000
Author / Creator: Aunt Julie
Submitted by: Dustin
Ingredients:
- 2-3 pounds cultivated mussels (up to 4)
- 3-4 tablespoons butter
- 1-2 tablespoons good olive oil
- 4-6 large shallots, finely chopped
- 4-6 cloves garlic, finely chopped
- 1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves
- 1-2 cups good white wine
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt
- 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Directions:
- Clean mussels of any debris and debeard (see notes below)
- Melt butter and olive oil together over medium heat
- Add shallots and saute for a few minutes
- Add garlic and saute for 1-2 minutes
- Add thyme, wine, salt and pepper and bring to a simmer
- Add Mussels, cover and cook until opened (usually 5 - 10 mins or so)
- Remove Mussels with a slotted spoon to a serving dish, if any do not open discard them
- Reduce the remaining liquid for 5 - 10 mins until desired richness
- Poor reduced sauce over Mussels and serve with good crusty bread for dipping!
Notes:
Cleaning / Debeard mussels:
Place the mussels in a colander in the sink and run water over them, using your hands or a clean scrubbing brush to rub off any debris like seaweed, sand, barnacles, or mud spots that could be on the shell. If you find any mussels with open shells, lightly tap that mussel against the side of the sink. If the mussel closes up again in response to this turmoil, it's alive. If it doesn't move, discard it.
The "beard" of a mussel is the clump of hair-like fibers that sprouts from the shell. Often farm-raised mussels will come debearded, but even so you'll want to check that there aren't some pesky ones hanging on. To remove the beard from the mussels, grab it with your thumb and forefinger and tug it toward the hinge of the mussel shell. You can also use a knife to gently scrape away the beard.
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