© Todd Coleman / Bonnier-
For successful grilling, two techniques are essential -- direct grilling and indirect grilling.
For successful grilling, two techniques are essential -- direct grilling and indirect grilling.
Check out these tips on where to visit in Naples, Italy.
Check out these tips on where to visit in Naples, Italy.
Native to central Asia, scallions are at once crisp and tender, cooling and hot -- perhaps that's why they travel so seamlessly between salads, soups and main dishes.
Native to central Asia, scallions are at once crisp and tender, cooling and hot -- perhaps that's why they travel so seamlessly between salads, soups and main dishes.
In the birthplace of the world's favorite food, the best pizza comes down to the basics.
In the birthplace of the world's favorite food, the best pizza comes down to the basics.
The tiny seed can be toasted and used whole, tossed into a jar of fermenting pickles, ground into a powder, or crushed and mixed with vinegar to form the familiar condiment that we spread onto sandwiches.
The tiny seed can be toasted and used whole, tossed into a jar of fermenting pickles, ground into a powder, or crushed and mixed with vinegar to form the familiar condiment that we spread onto sandwiches.
By John Grossman

Overlapping like dominoes, eight gleaming slices of Atlantic bigeye tuna occupied the plate.
On top was a mélange of exotic citrus, including three small mounds of tiny, translucent, pale green spheres that exploded in my mouth, enhancing the dish with stunning bursts of lime.
That was this past spring at the Philadelphia restaurant JG Domestic, and though I had first sampled finger limes about a year earlier in Adelaide, Australia, that citrus blast came, once again, as a pleasant shock.
Native to Australia, the finger lime, Citrus australasica, is a pinky-finger-shaped member of the citrus family. Inside its fragrant skin is a cluster of pearl-like vesicles.
After my first tastes, I understood why chefs call these "citrus caviar": for their roe-like crunch, and the way they pop in the mouth, releasing hits of acidity.
Fresh Australian finger limes aren't approved for import to the States, so most of America's supply comes from a few California growers.
In season, from late summer to mid-winter, the fruit can be found at West Coast farmers' markets, grocers like Whole Foods, and a growing number of restaurants; chefs from all over have caught on to the limes' charms.
At The Fifth Floor, a restaurant in San Francisco, chef David Bazirgan uses them to add tangy, textural contrast to the rich beurre blanc that tops sautéed scallops. Australian chef Andrew Fielke mixes the capsules into cocktails at home to add a concentrated citrus note. In Paris, Nicolas Berger, pastry chef at Alain Ducasse at the Plaza Athenée, uses finger limes as a bright, finishing touch in both fruit compotes and rich chocolate desserts.
Berger says, "It's the fleur de sel for the pastry chef."
Experimenting in my own kitchen, I folded the caviar into a homemade tartar sauce for salmon cakes, which added a beguiling pop-pop-pop. Even in this humble application, finger limes pack a punch.
See the recipe for Seared Scallops With Finger Lime Beurre Blanc »
See the recipe for Grilled Spot Prawns with Finger Limes and Basil »