Seared Tuna Roll with Basil Aioli

A fun home cooking project! Step-by-step recipe for sushi featuring tuna, avocado, and cucumber served alongside a basil aioli. Gluten-free. Welcome to amateur sushi night Tonights dinner was inspired by the leftover bowl of white rice thats been sitting in the back of my fridge. Weve been eating enough stir fries lately and I figured

A fun home cooking project! Step-by-step recipe for sushi featuring tuna, avocado, and cucumber served alongside a basil aioli. Gluten-free.

sushi / gluten free

Welcome to amateur sushi night… Tonight’s dinner was inspired by the leftover bowl of white rice that’s been sitting in the back of my fridge. We’ve been eating enough stir fries lately and I figured Jack was probably kale-d out. Plus I thought this sounded like “group” fun. (Especially for our little Japanese girl who was standing by for floor droppings).

We took a class once about 5 years ago at Central Market and I remembered this blackened tuna roll with 7-spice and basil sauce that I’d been meaning to make again. Of course Jack and I got home from the store and realized that the little bulk 7-spice baggie didn’t make it to the grocery bag. I threw a little tiny tantrum, collected myself, (took a drink of sake), remembered that cooking is fun, and just seared the tuna with salt.

So the basil sauce became the star here. While, sadly, most of my basil plant died in this past weeks’ frost, a few lonely sprigs survived to provide us enough for tonight’s sauce.

For the rice —  I was going to add a splash of water, rice vinegar and sugar (actually, agave syrup, because it’s the only sugar I usually keep on hand) to make sushi-esque rice. But when we took the leftover rice out of the fridge it was dry and un-reconstitute-able, so we tossed it and started over. Jack didn’t approve of my idea of “a splash of this a splash of that” sushi-esque rice, so he looked up the proper and official way to make sushi rice vinegar. He was very disappointed at my offering of agave syrup instead of “fine grain caster sugar” but he begrudgingly made do. I’m not going to say that this official recipe was simple… because it took him a good 30 minutes to create the mix while the rice cooker was cooking the rice… so I’m sure it involved much precision and technique.

Surprisingly I remembered from the class how to roll sushi rolls decently well.* And I garnished them with un-burnt toasted sesame seeds.

2 hours from start to finish we had a yummy sushi dinner.

* Intentionally not pictured here: Jack’s roll


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Seared Tuna Roll with Basil Aioli

  PrintAuthor: Serves: 3-4IngredientsBasil Aioli:
  • ½ cup mayo
  • 2 teaspoons wasabi paste, or to taste
  • 1 small garlic clove
  • 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
  • small handful basil leaves, blanched, shocked, and chopped
  • small handful spinach leaves, blanched, shocked, and chopped
Sushi:
  • 4-6 oz high quality fresh tuna
  • 1-2 cups sushi rice
  • 2 sheets nori, halved
  • 1 avocado
  • ½ cucumber, sliced into sticks
  • ¼ cup toasted sesame seeds
  • Sea salt and fresh black pepper
  • Extra-virgin olive oil, for searing
  • 7 spice blend (optional)
Instructions
  • Make the basil aioli: Combine the mayo, wasabi, garlic, olive oil, basil, and spinach in a small blender or food processor and blend until smooth.
  • Generously season both sides of the tuna with pinches of salt and pepper and rub with the 7 spice blend, if using. Heat a drizzle of olive oil in a pan and sear the tuna for 1 minute on each side. Remove from the pan, let cool, and slice into thin strips.
  • Prepare the rolls: Place a small bowl of water and a kitchen towel near your work area as your hands will get sticky. Place one nori sheet, glossy side down, onto a bamboo mat and press a handful of rice onto the lower two-thirds of the sheet. At the bottom of the rice place your toppings. Don’t overfill or it will be more difficult to roll. Use the bamboo mat to tuck and roll the nori. Once rolled, use the bamboo mat to gently press and shape the roll. Place the roll to the side, cut side down. Repeat with remaining rolls.
  • Use a sharp chef’s knife to cut the sushi. Wipe the knife clean with a damp towel between cuts.
  • Serve sushi alongside the basil aioli.
  • NotesThe Basil Aioli recipe comes courtesy of Timothy Thomas, via the Central Market Cooking School.3.4.3177
     

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