Crab Cake Sliders with Dill-Caper Cream

Crab Cake Sliders with Dill-Caper Cream
Crab Cake Sliders with Dill-Caper Cream might be just the hor d'oeuvre you are searching for. This recipe serves 12. One serving contains 207 calories, 9g of protein, and 14g of fat. This recipe covers 10% of your daily requirements of vitamins and minerals. If you have saltine crackers, pepper, dill-caper cream, and a few other ingredients on hand, you can make it. From preparation to the plate, this recipe takes roughly 27 minutes. It is a good option if you're following a dairy free and pescatarian diet.

Instructions

1
Stir together first 6 ingredients. Cover and chill 30 minutes.
2
Shape chilled crab mixture into 12 patties (about 1/3 cup each).
Ingredients you will need
CrabCrab
3
Place breadcrumbs in a shallow dish; dredge both sides of patties in breadcrumbs. Fry patties in hot oil, in batches, in large skillet over medium-high heat 2 minutes on each side or until golden.
Ingredients you will need
BreadcrumbsBreadcrumbs
Cooking OilCooking Oil
Equipment you will use
Frying PanFrying Pan
4
Drain on paper towels.
Equipment you will use
Paper TowelsPaper Towels
5
Place 1 crab cake on bottom half of each roll; top each with arugula and a dollop of Dill-Caper Cream. Cover with top halves of rolls.
Ingredients you will need
ArugulaArugula
CreamCream
RollRoll
CrabCrab
DillDill

Recommended wine: Chardonnay, Muscadet, Riesling

Shellfish works really well with Chardonnay, Muscadet, and Riesling. Buttery chardonnay is great for scallops, shrimp, crab, and lobster, while muscadet is a classic pick for mussels, oysters, and clams. If you've got some spice in your shellfish, a semi-dry riesling can balance out the heat. The Tyler Winery Santa Barbara County Chardonnay with a 4.1 out of 5 star rating seems like a good match. It costs about 30 dollars per bottle.
Tyler Winery Santa Barbara County Chardonnay
Tyler Winery Santa Barbara County Chardonnay
2015 brought the earliest vintage of the decade so far. After the large 2013 and 2014 vintages and the continued drought, the vines put forth a fraction of the fruit than the previous two years. They were down approximately 30% overall but the result was exceptional quality and deep, powerful wines with great acidity. Citrus, anise, saline, and energetic.
DifficultyMedium
Ready In27 m.
Servings12
Health Score4
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