Put down the lutefisk.
It's time to take a fresh look at preserved fish, and Minnesota's favorite lye-soaked cod in white sauce is not on this hot new menu. Instead, just a thin sheet of metal stands between you and some of the world's best seafood.
Several Twin Cities stores are increasing their supplies to meet the tinned-fish demand as charcuterie boards now star tins of mussels in escabeche sauce, and picnic baskets are stocked with delicate white tuna belly from Spain. At least one gourmet shop will open the can of your choosing and give you some crusty bread to go with it.
It's a trend that's only recently begun to catch on here, after a handful of restaurants on both coasts have devoted whole sections of their menus to tins, and more canneries are entering the market with catchy packaging and creative mix-ins.
"We're seeing newer, cooler stuff come out and consumer response has been great," said Keane Amdahl, marketing director of Coastal Seafoods. "We sell through a ton of canned seafood."
With an affinity for pickled herring, Minnesotans are no strangers to foods that have been canned, jarred or preserved in other ways. At its essence, canning fish has always been about making fresh food last; feeding people economically, accessibly and healthfully; and letting nothing go to waste.
Tinned fish's exciting new wave is just as utilitarian, stemming from the same traditional preservation practices but with an added element of luxury. Its origins trace to southern Europe, particularly Spain and Portugal, where conservas are a matter of national pride, and you can't pass through a duty-free shop without being tempted to fill your carry-on with cans of it. One Lisbon chain, with a name that translates to the Fantastic World of Portuguese Sardines, looks like a candy store met a circus, only instead of sweets, the bold, striped cans contain oil and fish.
In the Twin Cities, tinned fish-themed restaurants haven't taken off the way they have in Europe, New York or Los Angeles, where one tinned fish and Champagne bar, Kippered, is co-owned by Reed Herrick, a St. Louis Park native. But there's interest.