13 Old-Fashioned Seafood Recipes To Make Tonight — Eat This Not That

By Ghuman

Introduction

Seafood is a delicious and nutritious way to add variety to your dinner table. Whether you’re looking for a light and healthy meal or a hearty and comforting dish, there’s a seafood recipe for everyone. Here are 13 old-fashioned seafood recipes that are sure to please. From classic fish and chips to creamy chowders and flavorful fish tacos, these recipes are sure to become family favorites. So, grab your apron and get ready to cook up some delicious seafood dishes tonight!

13 Old-Fashioned Seafood Recipes To Make Tonight

Seafood is a classic favorite for dinner, and these old-fashioned recipes are sure to please. From classic fish and chips to a creamy seafood chowder, these recipes are sure to become family favorites. Whether you’re looking for a quick weeknight meal or a special occasion dinner, these recipes are sure to hit the spot.

1. Fish and Chips

This classic British dish is a favorite for a reason. Crispy fried fish and potatoes are a match made in heaven. Serve with tartar sauce and malt vinegar for a truly authentic experience.

2. Baked Salmon with Lemon and Dill

This simple yet flavorful dish is sure to be a hit. The lemon and dill bring out the natural flavor of the salmon, and the dish is ready in just 30 minutes. Serve with a side of roasted vegetables for a complete meal.

3. Shrimp Scampi

This classic Italian dish is a favorite for a reason. The combination of garlic, butter, and white wine creates a rich and flavorful sauce that pairs perfectly with the shrimp. Serve over pasta or rice for a complete meal.

4. Crab Cakes

These delicious cakes are a great way to enjoy crab. The combination of crabmeat, breadcrumbs, and herbs creates a flavorful and crispy cake. Serve with a side of tartar sauce or a creamy remoulade for a delicious meal.

5. Clam Chowder

This creamy chowder is a classic favorite. The combination of clams, potatoes, and cream creates a rich and flavorful soup. Serve with a side of crusty bread for a complete meal.

6. Grilled Shrimp Skewers

These flavorful skewers are a great way to enjoy shrimp. The combination of garlic, lemon, and herbs creates a delicious marinade that pairs perfectly with the shrimp. Serve with a side of grilled vegetables for a complete meal.

7. Lobster Rolls

These delicious sandwiches are a great way to enjoy lobster. The combination of lobster, mayonnaise, and celery creates a flavorful and creamy filling. Serve on a toasted bun for a delicious meal.

8. Mussels in White Wine Sauce

This classic French dish is a favorite for a reason. The combination of mussels, white wine, and herbs creates a flavorful and creamy sauce. Serve with a side of crusty bread for a complete meal.

9. Fried Calamari

This classic Italian dish is a favorite for a reason. The combination of calamari, flour, and herbs creates a flavorful and crispy coating. Serve with a side of marinara sauce for a delicious meal.

10. Grilled Salmon with Lemon and Herbs

This simple yet flavorful dish is sure to be a hit. The combination of lemon, herbs, and salmon creates a delicious and healthy meal. Serve with a side of roasted vegetables for a complete meal.

11. Oysters Rockefeller

This classic dish is a favorite for a reason. The combination of oysters, spinach, and cheese creates a flavorful and creamy topping. Serve with a side of crusty bread for a delicious meal.

12. Cioppino

This classic Italian-American dish is a favorite for a reason. The combination of seafood, tomatoes, and herbs creates a flavorful and hearty stew. Serve with a side of crusty bread for a complete meal.

13. Grilled Tuna Steaks

These flavorful steaks are a great way to enjoy tuna. The combination of herbs and spices creates a delicious marinade that pairs perfectly with the tuna. Serve with a side of grilled vegetables for a complete meal.

A dinner or afternoon filled with seafood is considered a luxury. What evening isn’t made better with a buttery shrimp scampi or a lobster tail or two? And, when you want to splurge at the beach, a lobster roll is a guilty pleasure that few can resist. But when you’ve run out of recipes—or have made too many rounds of baked salmon or shrimp stir-fry—it’s time to lug out the old cookbooks and find out what old-fashioned seafood recipes from the past you’re been missing.

RELATED: The Best Seafood Restaurant in Every State

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This classic dish is rumored to have been dreamed up in the late 1900s at Delmonico’s Restaurant in NYC, though a few origin stories abound, according to What’s Cooking America. To make it, take cooked lobster and bathe it in a luscious cream, egg, and cognac sauce, then pile that all in an edible puff pastry bowl.

Get Tasting Table’s recipe for Lobster Newburgh.

lobster thermidor old fashioned seafood recipe
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Classic Lobster Thermidor is a delicate dish of cooked lobster tossed with a wine and cream sauce that is similar to the one used in Lobster Newburgh. Instead of tossing the meat in a puff pastry shell, the delicious mixture is returned to its split shell, topped with Parmesan cheese, and broiled until bubbly. If you want to impress someone, this is the dish to make.

Get Food and Wine‘s recipe for Lobster Thermidor.

Garlic shrimp scampi recipe with linguine on a marble counter with squeezed lemon
Kiersten Hickman/Eat This, Not That!

Okay, this one isn’t exactly obscure. You’d be hard-pressed to find someone that doesn’t love this garlic-butter-tinged shrimp dish. Whether tossed over traditional linguini or lightened up with zucchini noodles, you can’t go wrong with classic shrimp scampi. Here is a great lightened-up shrimp scampi recipe that you can feel good about enjoying any time.

Get our recipe for Shrimp Scampi With Linguine Pasta.

RELATED: 16 Healthy Shrimp Recipes That Take 15 Minutes (or Less!)

paleo sole meuniere
Mitch Mandel and Thomas MacDonald

Meuniere is a style of cooking and also a French sauce that, like many other French dishes, just sounds complicated. You can use sole or any mild white fish—like trout—to make this dish. Simple coat it in flour and saute it in butter, then remove the fish and create a sauce in the pan with brown butter, lemon juice, and parsley. By the way, you can turn this dish into ‘almondine’ with some roasted almond slivers.

Get our recipe for Sole Menuière.

Oysters rockefeller
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The rich-sounding dessert—named after wealthy oil magnate John D. Rockefeller—lives up to its name. The dish consists of oysters on the half shell with a garlic-butter sauce and breadcrumbs. Many modern takes, like this one from Tyler Florence, add spinach and cheese. Fun fact: Oysters Rockefeller was created as a substitute for one of the other classic seafood dishes on this list, escargot.

Get Tyler Florence’s recipe for Oysters Rockefeller.

escargot old fashioned seafood recipe
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You either love or loathe escargot, French for snails. Many cultures eat these invertebrates—which are considered seafood even though some species dwell on land. They are best bathed in a white wine-garlic sauce and have a very mild flavor.

Get Bon Appetit’s recipe for Escargot.

crab louie old fashioned seafood recipe
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This cold crab salad is thought to have been whipped up in the West, most likely in California or Seattle, where Dungeness crab is popular and plentiful. The cold crab meat is tossed with a pink mayonnaise sauce flavored with ketchup, onions, garlic, and pickles or relish.

Get EatingWell’s recipe for Crab Louie.

RELATED: 43 Healthy Seafood Recipes That Are Surprisingly Easy to Make

shrimp old fashioned seafood recipe
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Shrimp Victoria was served at all of the big old-school New Orleans restaurants like Brennan’s and Commander’s Palace. The dish generally consists of sauteed shrimp in a light sour cream and mushroom sauce with fresh basil and is often served over rice.

Get Nola.com’s recipe for Shrimp Victoria.

shrimp saute old fashioned seafood recipe
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Head to New Orleans again for a taste of this old-school classic shrimp dish. Obviously big Gulf shrimp work best for this as the shrimp are the star in this dish. Round everything out with roasted potatoes, mushrooms and veggies tossed in a lemon butter sauce.

Get Serious Eats’ recipe for Shrimp Clemenceau.

sheet pan clam bake old fashioned recipe
Courtesy Creme de la Crumb

From the list above you might assume that old-fashioned seafood dishes are fancy, but that is not so. Originating in Gulf and Atlantic coastal regions, all kinds of seafood can be tossed in a huge pot and boiled with vegetables, but traditionally crawfish or shrimp are the most plentiful. Seafood boils are meant to casually feed a crowd and, while they can be held anywhere, a beach at dusk is hard to beat. Don’t forget to pair with a cold beer! Hint: Use a sheet pan like the recipe below does to make a clam boil or bake right at home any night of the week!

Get Creme de la Crumb’s shortcut recipe for Sheetpan Clam Bake.

lobster tails old fashioned seafood recipe
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This preparation of lobster is decadence at its finest. Watch Chef Ludo, born and raised in France, prepare this dish perfectly. He takes lobster tails, then curls them onto themselves, wraps them with bacon, and ties them together with kitchen twine. He makes an over-the-top sauce with red wine, truffles, and foie gras. After searing the lobster rounds or tournedos, he drapes the sauce over. You won’t find many dishes as luxurious as this one!

Get Chef Lufo’s recipe for Lobster Tournedos.

scallops grenobloise old fashioned seafood recipe
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Grenobloise sounds fancy but it is really just a classic French sauce made with lemon and capers hailing from the city of Grenoble, explains Food and Wine. Getting the best quality scallops for this dish is essential because the delicate sauce lets the seafood shine. P.S. this sauce can also work with other types of fish.

Get Food and Wine‘s recipe for Scallop Grenobloise.

Healthy cioppino
Mitch Mandel and Thomas MacDonald

Bouillabaisse is a classic French seafood stew. Typically clams, shrimp, and flaky white fish are simmered in a fish stock broth of garlic, fennel, and tomatoes with a touch of saffron. The California nod to this dish is a more tomato-heavy dish called cioppino, which you absolutely also must try.  If you want to make either of these dishes, take the advice from Serious Eats and use whatever is freshest. When you cannot use Mediterranean fish or Dungeness crab from the San Francisco bay, use the freshest, most affordable fish you can find.

Get our recipe for Classic Cioppino.

The trick to all of these old-fashioned seafood recipes is to use the freshest seafood available to you. Don’t be afraid to use substitutes when necessary. Maybe you can’t spring for fresh Maine lobster for Lobster Newburg; use shrimp instead! And classic sauces like Grenobloise and Meunière will work great with sauteed chicken breasts. Sometimes true beauty of the classics, in the end, is the simplicity.