Our son and UT graduate, Rhett, drove into Knoxville from his home in South Carolina to go to the UT/USC football game with some of his fraternity brothers this past weekend. On Sunday, he and Beth came to down to our place for a short visit before heading home.
You may recall on my last post for Crab Imperial Stuffed Crappie And Shrimp that
I stated “One of these days I'm going to turn loose of some of the kids
inheritance and buy some jumbo lump crab meat.”
When they walked in the door, Rhett handed me a small paper
bag and said with a grin that he had a gift for me so I wouldn’t have to spend
their inheritance. I opened it to find
two eight-ounce containers of jumbo lump crab meat.
So I set about finding a recipe with little filler and not too many flavors to compete with the crab and the one I chose for The Very Best Crab Cakes came from “The Suburban Soapbox” blog. Her blog description is “Maryland style Crab Cakes made with jumbo lump crab meat and very little filler! The BEST crab cake recipe you'll ever make.” I followed Kellie’s recipe except I used crushed Ritz crackers rather than Panko breadcrumbs.
The Very Best Crab Cakes – Adapted from The Suburban Soapbox
The Ingredients:
1 pound jumbo lump crab meat, picked over for shells
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon hot sauce, I use Tabasco
1 large egg, lightly beaten
1 tsp fresh lemon zest
1/8 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
2 tablespoons fresh chopped parsley
1/4 cup panko bread crumbs (crushed Ritz crackers)
1 tablespoon olive oil
The Instructions:
1. In a medium bowl, carefully pick over the crab and remove
any shells.
2. In a small bowl, stir together the mayonnaise, Dijon, Worcestershire
sauce, hot sauce, egg, pepper, lemon zest and parsley.
3. Add the mayonnaise mixture to the crab and, carefully, fold together being careful not to break up the crab meat too much.
4. Gently fold in
the cracker crumbs.
5. Form into patties (I made five large ones) and
transfer to a baking sheet lined with parchment. Chill for 15-20 minutes.
6. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high
heat.
7.Add the crab cakes and cook over medium heat until golden,
approximately 3-4 minutes. Turn the crab cakes over with a spatula. Cook until
golden brown, crispy and cooked through, approximately 3 minutes. I had trouble flipping the last one but it
still ate fine.
8. Transfer to a plates and serve immediately with
your favorite sauce, if desired. I used remoulade.
The Verdict:
They were delicious and I’ll use this recipe again with a
little less lemon zest make sure the crab is pretty dry. It would be interesting to have a taste test using claw in some and lump in the others. Thanks, Rhett
for making this meal happen.
No leftovers for breakfast as the crab cakes were all we ate for supper.
Photos can be enlarged by clicking on them and the blue
words are links.
Have a great day and thanks for
stopping by Almost Heaven South.
Larry
10/5/23 meal date
Hi Larry, Nice gift and surprise! On our recent trip to the Delmarva Peninsula, crab was big on the menus...but certainly not inexpensive. Crab Dip = $16.00; Cream of Crab Soup = $11.50; Fried Soft Crab Sandwich = $26.95. Your crab cakes look top notch for sure...and the recipe doesn't distract from the prime ingredient. Take Care, Big Daddy Dave
ReplyDeleteSounds delicious. Will save recipe , Marge
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun story about the crab meat. And yay that they stayed together so well and didn't fall apart. I'll have to try this recipe.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great son! I'm sure he was very happy to eat those crab cakes--they look SO delicious!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great meal and the inheritance is still in tack. Karen
ReplyDeleteHa-ha! I hear you on spending the kid's inheritance on lump crab meat! Usually, I'll use crab claws to make crabcakes because they're less expensive. Crab cakes are a real special occasion treat and you definitely had one with your son at home and how nice that he bought crab meat with him! They look wonderful!
ReplyDelete