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RED SNAPPER WITH MERGUEZ SAUSAGE, LITTLENECK CLAMS AND ROMESCO

RED SNAPPER WITH MERGUEZ SAUSAGE, LITTLENECK CLAMS AND ROMESCO

A Restaurant-Worthy Seafood Dinner in 30 Minutes

Cover of 'Alfred Portale's Gotham Bar and Grill Cookbook' featuring a dining table scene with wine, glassware, and warm lighting.
Alfred Portale’s Gotham Bar and Grill, one of a library of the Chef’s great cookbooks. Click on the cover to see them all.

There are certain chefs whose influence lingers long after you have left their kitchens, their restaurants, or in my case, their cookbooks. Alfred Portale was one of them.

In the years when The Gotham Bar and Grill Cookbook rarely strayed far from my stove, Portale taught an entire generation of cooks that food could be elegant without becoming fussy. His layering of flavors—and yes, his famously architectural presentations—made restaurant cooking feel thoughtful, dramatic, and deeply intelligent.

This dish began there.

Over time, however, it became very much my own: red snapper paired with spicy merguez sausage, littleneck clams, and a romesco-inspired sauce that quietly travels from Spain to North Africa before landing squarely at the dinner table.

What I still love about it is how naturally these flavors belong together.Clams in tomato sauce garnished with parsley served on a decorative plate at a dining table.

Romesco, born in Catalonia, has long been a natural companion to seafood. Merguez sausage, deeply spiced and earthy, brings warmth and just enough swagger to keep the dish from becoming overly polite. Littleneck clams lend briny broth and a clean taste of the sea, while spinach beneath it all gives the plate balance and structure. Red snapper, delicate but firm enough to stand up to bold flavors, ties everything together beautifully.

The result is one of those dishes that feels as though it belongs in a very good Mediterranean restaurant—fragrant, smoky, slightly spicy, and layered enough to taste far more complicated than it really is. Yet if you make the romesco ahead of time, the entire meal comes together in about 30 minutes, which remains my kind of culinary generosity.

Dish of fried fish fillet in tomato-based sauce with clams, garnished with parsley on an ornate plate, ready to serveA Dish That Quietly Travels

One of the pleasures of cooking is discovering how naturally flavors from different corners of the world can meet on a single plate. Spain gives us romesco, that deeply savory pepper-and-paprika sauce that practically begs for seafood. North Africa lends the unmistakable spice of merguez. The clams soften and deepen the broth, while tomatoes brighten the entire dish and keep it from feeling too rich.Put together, it becomes elegant enough for guests and fast enough for a weeknight when you want to  cook as if you know exactly what you are doing.

 

Red Snapper with Merguez Sausage, Littleneck Clams & Romesco Serves 4

May 26, 2026
: 4

A quick note: this is a romesco-inspired sauce rather than a strict traditional Spanish version. Classic romesco often includes nuts and bread; I leave both out here, making the sauce lighter and especially good with fish.

By:

Ingredients
  • For the Romesco-Inspired Sauce:
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 large onion, halved and thinly sliced
  • 1 large red bell pepper, seeded and thinly sliced
  • 8 large garlic cloves, thinly sliced
  • 1½ tablespoons sweet Hungarian paprika
  • 1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • Kosher salt
  • For the Spinach:
  • 1 pound baby spinach
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • For the Snapper and Sausage:
  • 4 red snapper fillets (about 6 ounces each)
  • Kosher salt and black pepper
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 8 ounces merguez sausage, cut into serving lengths
  • (Merguez is a spicy lamb sausage with North African roots. If you cannot find it, a spicy Italian sausage makes a perfectly respectable substitute.)
  • To Bring It All Together
  • 12 littleneck clams
  • 1 cup clam broth
  • 1 cup diced tomatoes (I still like Pomi here)
  • Chopped parsley
  • Chopped cilantro
Directions
  • Step 1 First, heat the olive oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add the onion, cover, and cook gently until softened, about 10 minutes. Add the bell pepper and continue cooking, covered, for another 5 minutes until tender. Stir in the garlic and cook another 4 to 5 minutes.
  • Step 2 Add the paprika, red pepper flakes, and salt. Uncover and cook for another 5 minutes, allowing the spices to bloom and deepen. Transfer to a bowl and set aside. This can be made several hours ahead and held at room temperature.
  • Step 3 For the Spinach:
  • Step 4 Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the spinach, season generously with salt and pepper, and cook covered for about 3 minutes. Turn with tongs and continue cooking until wilted and tender. Set aside and keep warm.
  • Step 5 To Cook the Snapper and Sausage:
  • Step 6 Season the snapper generously with salt and pepper. Heat the olive oil in a large sauté pan over medium-high heat. Add the sausage and cook for 2 to 3 minutes, allowing it to brown lightly.
  • Step 7 Add the snapper and cook until lightly golden, about 3 minutes. Carefully turn both fish and sausage, then continue cooking another 3 to 4 minutes, until the snapper flakes easily and the sausage is fully cooked.
  • Step 8 Set aside and keep warm.
  • Step 9 Next,bring it all together:
  • Step 10 In a large saucepan, combine the clams and clam broth. Cover and cook over high heat until the clams open, about 4 minutes. Discard any that remain stubbornly closed.
  • Step 11 Stir in the reserved romesco and diced tomatoes and warm through for another minute.
  • Step 12 Divide the spinach among four warmed shallow bowls. Arrange the sausage over the spinach, place a red snapper fillet on top of each serving, scatter the clams around the fish, and spoon the romesco broth over and around everything. Finish with parsley and cilantro.
  • Step 13 Serve immediately.

A Final Nod to Mr. Portale

Great chefs do more than leave us recipes. They leave us ideas that linger long after the meal is over. This one began with Alfred Portale. I’m simply grateful it still comes together in 30 minutes. That little hook is back where it belongs—and I think brilliantly so.

For More Seafood Recipes, try these on Chewing The Fat…

https://chewingthefat.us.com/?s=Fish

 


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