Skip to content

Axivor

Get Update

  • Home
  • Life Coach
  • Luxury Lifestyle
  • Travel Lifestyle
  • Travel Tips
  • Urban Life
  • More
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
  • Toggle search form
66 Square Feet (Plus): Tuna Mousse: Food for a Heatwave

66 Square Feet (Plus): Tuna Mousse: Food for a Heatwave

Posted on June 30, 2025 By Rehan No Comments on 66 Square Feet (Plus): Tuna Mousse: Food for a Heatwave

It wobbles, it jiggles, it’s straight out of the beginning of the middle of the last century. It’s wonderful. It’s tuna mousse. Wrong, somehow. But wonderful. And inhalable. I revive the recipe every year when heat threatens and I won’t cook indoors. We are in for a possibly unprecedented week.

We  – the Frenchman and I – used to eat it on our rooftop in Cobble Hill, accompanied by Don Estorbo (de la Bodega Dominicana – a bodega cat before bodega cats were cool), with a wide view over New York Harbor. In those days we had a single, room airconditioner, whose roaring was no match for the baking heat. The rooftop was our evening escape.

Tuna…is overfished. Try and find pole-caught tuna: American Tuna, Wild Planet, or Whole Foods 365 brand are better choices. Walk past the Starkist. You are better than Starkist.

Tuna Mousse

The beauty of this decadent, 60’s-suggestive mousse is that it goes with all the crunchy, healthy things: celery stalks, crisp cucumber spears, carrot sticks, endive leaves, snap peas (halved lengthwise), long breakfast radishes or round, stout ones, quartered.

Tuna Mixture:

2 cans tuna in olive oil, drained
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1 Tablespoon ketchup
4 cornichons (tiny cucumber pickles) 
1 Tablespoon capers
2 Tablespoons lemon or lime juice
Freshly ground black pepper

Wobble Mixture:

1/3 cup just-boiled water
1 packet (1 Tablespoon) gelatin

For the tuna mixture: Combine the ingredients and whizz in a food processor till smooth. No food processor? Chop the capers and cornichons finely, then mash everything with a fork in a mixing bowl bowl.

Wobble mixture: In a small bowl, combine the gelatin and the extremely hot water and stir until the gelatin has dissolved. 

Add the gelatin mixture to the tuna mixture and whizz/mash again.

Taste. Assess the salt, pepper and lemon juice situation. Adjust.

Transfer the tuna mousse mixture into a small bowl or mold. Chill for at least 2 hours. To unmold, slide a knife dipped in hot water around its edges, cover with the serving plate, and shake until it plops out.

It wobbles. See?

Of course, you can also eat it with a good baguette, or dark brown Scandi bread. Or crackers. Or a spoon. Or on your own, with no one else watching.

Here’s a bonus picture of Storbie, aka Estorbo loco, aka The Don. 

Gone, never forgotten. Eeep.

Urban Life

Post navigation

Previous Post: Break Free from Your Comfort Zone for Growth
Next Post: Montenegro — The Collyer Twins

More Related Articles

878: Matthew Geldin on Building Neighborhood Farms 878: Matthew Geldin on Building Neighborhood Farms Urban Life
Chronicle of a flag design Chronicle of a flag design Urban Life
Latinx Entrepreneurs in Philadelphia – A Legacy of Resilience and Growth – The Metropole Latinx Entrepreneurs in Philadelphia – A Legacy of Resilience and Growth – The Metropole Urban Life
A Therapeutic Walk at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens – For Urban Women A Therapeutic Walk at the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens – For Urban Women Urban Life
Where to Experience Spring Cherry Blossoms and Festivals Where to Experience Spring Cherry Blossoms and Festivals Urban Life
Robert Schwandl’s Urban Rail Blog: COPENHAGEN Robert Schwandl’s Urban Rail Blog: COPENHAGEN Urban Life

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

  • Life Coach
  • Luxury Lifestyle
  • Travel Lifestyle
  • Travel Tips
  • Urban Life

Copyright © 2025 Axivor.

Powered by PressBook Blog WordPress theme