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How to Make Seafood Cioppino | Seafood Recipe | Allrecipes.com



Get the recipe @ http://allrecipes.com/recipe/seafood-cioppino/detail.aspx

Watch how to make a top-rated cioppino that boasts 5 kinds of seafood. Shrimp, scallops, cod, clams, and mussels, they’re all in here!

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18 Comments

  1. 2 comments—. That sounds a lot like Giada DeLaurentis.
    And ‘most likely Italian-American’? As a SF native, having grown up in restaurant kitchen enviro, and my 100% Italian grandfather was a fisherman, I can attest that it is a very safe bet that real cioppino is at the minimum 99% Italian fishermen origin. That other 1% are the ones that ‘wish’ they had originated the recipe.
    Sour dough bread, not rice. It’s also served with pasta by some. But good SD bread is the norm.

    The mix of seafood is also varied. But crab, mussels/clams, and firm white fish are the most commonly used. Prawns, scallops, small squid, etc are occasionally used but not really the traditional mix. It’s up to your taste really.
    If any SF restaurants survive this C19 problem, go to Sotto Mare in No Beach, or Alioto’s on the wharf for the genuine SF dish. Both are award quality venues and will serve you the ‘real deal’. 👍🏼🍷

  2. We only have frozen New Zealand mussels available in the general Los Angeles and Ventura county areas. If there are live ones, they are very hard to find, unless you want to pick them from among the big rocks along the shores of California, and those may not be safe to consume. If you guys know the stores that sell live mussels, please let us know. Thanks.

  3. This looks great — but cioppino is not Italian. It is from San Francisco. Back in the days, after the fishermen sold their catches, someone would start a pot and all the fishermen would ask if anyone would "chip in" the seafood they did not sell.

    Serve with rice? I have to disagree. Sourdough garlic bread, toasted ciabatta, or your favorite artisan bread. Oh, and do not forget the pinot grigio or your favorite dry, white wine.

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