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Meet Jermaine Owens of North Fork Seafood

many raw pink and white fresh raw fish fillets

Despite the growing consumption of local seafood, having the skill to fillet fish like you can do it in your sleep is a declining art, says Jermaine Owens, who owns North Fork Seafood with his partner Danielle Cullen.

“I am a second generation fish cutter,” he says using a term he picked up during his entire life in the fish biz, “and it’s a dying art.” Southampton born, Owens has worked in every aspect of the industry: 27 years on party boats, fishing boats and in the big fish markets like Cor-J in Hampton Bays and Braun in Cutchogue. “I’ve always been around boats,” he adds.

This time of the year the fishery is opening up with the arrival of porgies, black sea bass and fluke; Owens knows ahead of time. “I can smell it when a big school of fish is in the waters,” he says. He also knows what his catch likes to eat as they grow. “In the cold weather they like softer bait.”

Pre-covid, Owens and Cullen opened a fish store on Shelter Island, which also had a restaurant. Things went well, until they didn’t. The store closed and the couple were back at square one. Owens’ phone started ringing. Friends in Greenport wanted to know where they could get some fish. He sourced down at the docks and delivered it to their door. She told two friends and they told two friends and then customers on the North and South forks were texting their orders and the couple was busy.

The popularity of fish tacos put porgy on the menu; Owens will deliver them whole or filleted. Black sea bass is very popular, says Cullen, because it’s such sturdy, thick white fish. “We eat it alot,” she says, but Owens likes his fried and she likes it oven baked. The fish holds up well in both dishes. 

Jermaine will be a part of the next episode of SFEE’s Chef Series, which features chef/restaurant owner/author, and North Fork Seafood customer Ned Baldin of Houseman in New York City. The cooking demo/fundraiser will be on zoom Wednesday, March 31 from 6 – 7 p.m. Tickets are $50 for general admission and $40 for Slow Food members. The confirmation email will include the Zoom link and a link to some of Ned’s recipes.

In addition to the delivery service, the couple has teamed up with Zilniki’s Farm in Riverhead to provide seafood for their CSA. The farm is part of a network that uses a website so customers can customize their boxes, something new on the East End. 

During the month of March on Saturdays, they sold prepared food for pickup from the Grit and Grace space on the Main Road in Southold. 

North Fork Seafood’s main advertising venues are Facebook, which has a form to set up orders, and Instagram. But by the time you’re a regular, your number will be in Owen’s phone and he’ll see your name when you text to place an order. They are working on plans to open a retail space somewhere on the North Fork. 

Owens says fisheries have been restored better than ever before and most workers are waiting for the federal government to raise limits. And then the smell of a school of fish will only get stronger.

Chef Series: with Ned Baldwin

Join Slow Food East End for a virtual cooking demo with chef/restaurant owner and Orient resident Ned Baldwin. Ned is the owner of Houseman restaurant and just released a new cookbook, How to Dress an Egg: Surprising and Simple Ways to Cook Dinner.

Ned will be joined by his co-author, Peter Kaminsky, and the demo will include a fish lesson by Jermaine Owens of North Fork Seafood.

Tickets are $50 for general admission and $40 for Slow Food members. (Become a member.)

Chef Series: Cooking Slow with Peter Berley

In March 2021, local Chef Peter Berley cooked with us from his beautiful kitchen in South Jamesport, where he teaches many cooking classes in front of a roaring fire for a reimagined St. Patrick’s Day Dinner

Chef Berley foremost concern is the development of local sustainable food systems and the fate of the home cooking in America.

A former executive chef of the world-renowned Angelica Kitchen restaurant in New York City, Berley now owns of The North Fork Kitchen and Garden, a culinary studio where he teaches intensive workshops on modern food craft and wood-fired bread baking and cooking.

His ground-breaking “The Modern Vegetarian Kitchen” received a James Beard and IACP awards. A second book “Fresh Food Fast” was chosen as one of the 25 Best of 2005 by Food and Wine Magazine. Peter’s latest new book “The Flexitarian Table; Inspired Flexible Meals for Vegetarians, Meat lovers and Everyone In Between,” was released in 2007.

The dinner featured braised lamb shanks with Greenport Harbor Brewery Black Duck Porter, wholemeal Irish soda bread, spicy smashed turnips, and apple cabbage salad. 

Greenport Harbor Brewing Co.‘s Greg Doroski joined the Zoom call to talk about the beer Peter will cooked with. GHB, one of the first craft breweries on the North Fork, opened in 2009 in the old Greenport firehouse. It has since expanded with a full brewery and tasting room in Peconic, which features a restaurant. Its beers are distributed in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey. Every drop of its 10,000 barrels a year are made on the North Fork. Greg Doroski of Mattituck, a former partner and head brewer at Threes Brewing in Brooklyn, began his career as an intern at Greenport Harbor, and returned a year ago to serve as innovations director.

Chef Series: Cooking Slow with Claudia Fleming

We are happy to kick off our Chef Series with pastry chef Claudia Fleming. She moved to Southold with her husband, Gerry Hayden and dear friends, Mike and Mary Mraz to open North Fork Table & Inn in 2005, which was a pioneer of the farm to table movement becoming recognized as Long Island’s top rated restaurant, and one of the very few East End restaurants to be awarded the Slow Food Snail of Approval award. Claudia is a widely acclaimed pastry chef and author of the beautiful and delicious book, The Last Course, where she shares her tips and talents honed from a wonderful career working at favorite NYC restaurants, Union Square Cafe, Montrachet, Tribeca Bar & Grill, & Gramercy Tavern where she was awarded the coveted a James Beard Award in 2000. We are also delighted to have North Table co-founder, Mike Mraz participating tonight, a wine expert who now works with T Edwards Wine & Spirits, a distributor of fine wines and craft spirits.

Read  more about Claudia’s dessert recipes by getting a copy of her book, The Last Course.

 

WATCH: Latkepalooza

To celebrate a virtual Hanukkah, Chef Noah Schwartz and his mom Pennie, our chair at Slow Food East End, demo how to make regular latkes, sweet potato latkes and latkes made with the Long Island cheese pumpkin, a squash in our ark of taste.

RECIPES: Latkepalooza

We’ve got the recipes from our Latkepalooza Slow Food East End Live. Chef Noah Schwartz and his mom Pennie, our own chair of the SFEE board, demonstrated how to cook the latkes and how to break down the argument of the choice between baked or fried.

Noah’s Local Cheese Pumpkin Latke Recipe

  • 2 lb. local cheese pumpkin (or other hard winter squash like butternut)
  • 1 yellow onion
  • 1 egg
  • ½ cup flour
  • ¼ cup thinly sliced scallions (greens or tops)
  • 1 Tbl. Garam Masala
  • Chives for garnish
  • Canola oil for frying
  • Salt and pepper

Peel, seed and scrape pumpkin. Grate pumpkin and onions on largest side of a box grater. Ring out all excess liquid through a towel, squeezing hard. Mix in eggs, flour and scallions. Fold in with your hands to incorporate ingredients. Form lose ¼-cup cakes and pan fry for approximately two minutes on each side until golden brown. Garnish with thinly sliced chives. Serve warm with applesauce and sour cream.

 

Noah’s Potato Latke Recipe

  • 3 large white potatoes
  • 1 yellow onion
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ cup flour
  • ¼ cup thinly sliced chili peppers (optional)
  • Chives for garnish
  • Canola oil for frying
  • Salt and pepper

Peel potatoes and cover with cold water. Boil for ten minutes or until just tender with a fork but not soft. Let chill in refrigerator until fully cooled. Grate potatoes and onions on largest side of a box grater. Ring out all excess liquid through a towel, squeezing hard. Mix in eggs flour and chili’s if using. Fold in with your hands to incorporate ingredients. Form lose ¼ cup cakes and pan fry for approximately 2 minutes on each side until golden brown. Garnish with thinly sliced chives. Serve warm with apple sauce and sour cream.

Noah’s Local Sweet Potato Latke Recipe

  • 2 medium sweet potatoes
  • 1/2 yellow onion
  • 1 egg
  • ½ cup flour
  • ¼ cup thinly sliced scallions (bottoms)
  • Chives for garnish
  • Canola oil for frying
  • Salt and pepper

Grate potatoes and onions on largest side of a box grater. Ring out all excess liquid through a towel, squeezing hard. Mix in eggs, flour and scallions. Fold in with your hands to incorporate ingredients. Form lose ¼ cup cakes and pan fry for approximately 2 minutes on each side until golden brown. Garnish with thinly sliced chives. Serve warm with applesauce and sour cream.

 

Vegan Sour Cream

  • 1 cup raw cashews, soaked for at least 4 hours if you do not have a  high-powered blender
  • ½ cup water  
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice, or more if needed  • 1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar  
  • Heaping ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt  
  • ¼ teaspoon Dijon mustard  
  1. If you soaked your cashews, drain and rinse them until the water runs clear.  
  2. In a blender, combine the cashews, water, lemon juice, vinegar, salt and mustard. Blend until the mixture is smooth and creamy, stopping to scrape down the sides as necessary. If you’re having trouble blending the mixture, or would prefer a thinner consistency, slowly blend in up  to ½-cup additional water, as needed.  
  3. Taste and add an additional teaspoon of lemon juice if  you would like more tang, or add more salt for a more intense flavor. Serve immediately or chill the  sour cream for later.  
  4. Leftovers keep well, chilled, for about 5 days. The sour  cream will thicken the more it rests, thin by whisking in a small amount of water.