Poke is diced raw fish served eaten as an appetizer or a main course. Poke means “chunk” in Hawaiian. The traditional Hawaiian poke was served with sea salt, seaweed, and candlenut.
Tuna poke is easy to make. Fish and umami flavors of soy sauce and seaweed are a match made in heaven. Roe and seaweed add another layer of flavor and texture. You can have fun and make a beautiful presentation or play around with ingredients. I played with this recipe for a couple of years. Serve with seaweed salad, edamame from the frozen foods section, and sushi take out rice from a Japanese restaurant to make this a quick complete meal. The trick may be to get some of the ingredients. Big stores probably have them all but if they don’t there are Amazon links at the bottom of the recipe.
I call it seaweed because that’s traditionally what it has been called but people are now calling it sea vegetables which is what they really are. Not only are they delicious but they are very high in vitamins and minerals.
Caught using trolling lines off the coast of northern California, albacore tuna is a Seafood Watch “Best Choice.”
EQUIPMENT: wooden cutting board, chef’s knife, microplane