Surfing, Skateboarding, Music, Photography, Travel, Culture and general antics of the youth on the run.

WHAT YOUTH EATS AND DRINKS this weekend Your guide to a delicious and multi-cultural Fourth of July

The Fourth is meant for equal parts fireworks, food, drink, babes, waves, and bad decisions. Cases of beer, they appear. Food, it arrives at the right time. America at its best!

Do we want to eat and drink well on the Fourth? Yes! But do we want to work hard for our food on the Fourth? Fuck No! So how do we pull this… how do we eat and drink well on such a rad weekend, without spending all our time cooking and mixing? And can we branch beyond the hot dogs and burgers and Budweiser and Coors?

Despite what some presidential hopefuls might say, one of the greatest things about America is diversity. Diversity of people, culture, food, drink. Which means do you don’t have to stick to the meat and lager standards. M

Maybe celebrate diversity this Fourth by skipping the usual and going global. Maybe some Mexican food. Maybe something Middle Eastern. America at its best is when it’s a melting pot… your table is too.

With that all, I’ll get off my high horse and show you a few of our favorite mash up recipes… quick things you can do throughout this long weekend to up the game and celebrate diversity. They’re not traditional, they’re not authentic, and some of them might be frowned upon by red blooded ‘merica lovers. But that’s fine with us.

Here’s to a great USA and some quick, simple food and drink to celebrate it. —Paul Brewer

WORLD TOUR FRENCH TOAST WITH MOUNT GAY RUM BANANAS FOSTER

It’s a holiday weekend and you wanna live life, so try this: French toast with bread from Hawaii and rum from Barbados and bananas from who knows where. French Toast doesn’t happen often. But when it does, it’s sweet, unadulterated stickiness. Plates are licked.

French toast, food

For the French toast:

– 3 sliced of thick bread per person. Try Danish bread or Hawaiian King Bread.

– 4 eggs

– 1/2 cup milk

– 1/2 teaspoon vanilla

– 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon

In a shallow mixing bowl, whisk together the eggs, milk, vanilla and cinnamon. Quickly dip slices in mixture and cook in a hot skillet with a little butter until golden brown on both sides.

For the banana foster topping:

– 1 stick butter

– 1/2 cup brown sugar

– 4 bananas peeled and halved, cut lengthwise

– 1/4 cup dark rum, preferably Mount Gay from Barbados

Melt butter in a large skillet. Add brown sugar and stir together. Add the bananas and cook until caramelized over medium-high heat. Pour in the rum and catch a flame off of the gas stove or a BBQ lighter. Stand back when ignited and flambe. Be careful; a flame will shoot up above the pan. Let flame die down.

SCALLOP CEVICHE

After a bit of travel and finding out how many types of ceviche there are in the world, my whole perspective on it really changed. Before, it was just spicy white fish from Mexico or Peru with the saltines, etc. But the revelation that it’s really just fish that’s been “cooked” with acid usually from citrus, the experimentation opened. A ceviche can easily bring in any flavors, even European ingredients, like this one.

What Youth Eats, Ceviche

In a bowl, we mixed the ingredients seen in the photo. That’s scallops, Swiss chard stem, onion, almonds, and lemon juice. (Sub in anything, but try to include something acidic, something crunchy, and something with bite.) Left ours overnight for the scallops to cook. Perfect.

THE FRENCH 75

It’ might seem a strange to drink something with “French” in the title on America’s favorite holiday, but, you know, the French and Americans have been allies for a long time so we’re all part of the tribe. It’s potent, and gets its name from a spicy little rapid-fire 75 mm gun the French used in WWI. Good background, but we dig this cocktail because it’s really refreshing, bright, and yes, strong. Great for hot nights. 

french 75, what youth drinks

  • .5 oz Fresh lemon juice
  • .5 oz Simple syrup (one part water, one part sugar)
  • 2 oz Gin
  • 2-3 oz Champagne float.

Shake the first 3 ingredients with ice, and strain into a glass. Float the sparkling wine on top.

This might be nicer if a martini glass, collins glass, or better yet a coup were used, but this little tumbler was the best we could wrestle up.

TUNA CRUDO IN A WONTON CUP WITH AVOCADO

Go ahead and make this. They’re really light and refreshing, and won’t make you so full that you shut down for the rest of the day. There are four parts to this amazing thing, so here’s the recipe broken down in four parts, then combined at the end.

What Youth Eats, Tuna

1. Wasabi mayo

Mix wasabi and mayo in a bowl. If you want more spicy, add more wasabi. It you want more fat, add more mayo.

2. Fried wonton crisp

This takes a little finesse. Buy some wonton sheets from the store. Get a fry pan hot, Then add some vegetable oil. Once the oil is hot, test one wonton sheet: drop it in the oil. It shouldn’t burn outright (if it is turn down the heat), and also shouldn’t be greasy upon removal (if it is turn up the heat). When you pull a good fried wonton out, it will be a little pliable at first then set to a nice golden crisp. So get a little bowl and use it as a form to make your wonton into a little cup to hold the tuna as you pull each fried wonton out. Make sense? mMke about 4 per person and set aside on a towel to drain and cool.

3. Tuna filling

In a bowl, mix chopped raw ahi tuna (1/3 lb per person), chopped chives, sesame seeds, two garlic cloves mashed to a paste, a squirt of rooster sauce (siracha or something?), a couple leaves of cilantro, a touch of sesame oil, a touch of soy sauce, and a squeeze of fresh lime right at the end (right at the end or else it will cook the fish and make it gray, not brilliant red).

4. avocado

chunked.

On a plate, put a dollop (a lame word, but the best i can think of) of wasabi mayo for each wonton. Put the cup on top of each dollop (the dollop is like glue keeping the wonton from tipping). Spoon in fresh chunked avocado, a couple chunks per cup. on top of that, the tuna mixture. See photo.

A BURGER

Yes, a burger. A ‘Frisco burger. I think a burger has to come into play on the Fourth of July, though it doesn’t have to be boring. For this one, I’ve brought in a chipotle ketchup, feta cheese (Greece), and lamb patties (Middle East, mainly). An American symphony in burger form. 

What Youth Eats, Frisco burger

For Onions:

Saute onion rounds in olive oil; sprinkle with 3/4 teaspoon coarse salt and pepper. toss in 1/2 cup vinegar and cool until onions are tender, about 20 minutes. Can be made 3 days ahead. Cover; chill.

For chipotle ketchup:

Mix ketchup and canned chipotle chiles in small bowl. Season with salt. Can be made 3 days ahead. Cover and chill.

For burgers:

Shape lamb into 1/2 pound, 1/2-inch thick patties. Sprinkle patties on both sides with coarse salt and pepper. Prepare stove top skillet (preferably cast iron), and Pplace burgers on skillet. Cook burgers until bottoms start to darken and juices rise to surface, about 3 minutes per side. Top with onions and cheese, and place burgers under the broiler until the cheese is melted and bubble. While the burgers are in the broiler, also Broil or toast the sourdough slices, then spread em with ketchup. Top with burgers, lettuce, and anything you may like such as tomatoes, pickles, etc. Serve with remaining ketchup to pass.

THAI CLAM STEAMERS

How good are clams. I’ve been experimenting with different flavors and sauces to give them a different spin. Here’s a pretty nice one that you’ll see in restaurants sometimes, and it fits in the weekend theme nicely. 

1419376718944

In a skillet that you have a lid for, saute some onions, garlic, and red pepper flakes in some olive oil and a big pat of butter. Once the veggies are fragrant, throw in some scrubbed clams (or mussels) and some lemon grass stalks. give the pan a shake like you mean it, then after a minute pour in a glass full of white wine. then pour in half a can of coconut milk. Reduce heat to a high simmer, cover, and stir every so often until the clams are open. If they don’t open, they’re bad and will make ya sick. Toss em.

Taste the sauce. Does it need salt or pepper? Add it. Finish with a generous sprinkle of cilantro and serve with some crusty bread.

The WY Guide: The South West of France Your escape for autumn includes fine wine, women and beachbreaks

Everyone knows the second the U.S. Open of Surfing ends, summer might as well be over and done with. You might get a few hot beach days out of it, but it’s time to start planning your next move. August is weird. It’s hot. And sticky. And crowded. And aside from maybe Japan and Tahiti…

The WY Guide: Newport Beach, CA A coastal circus we somehow love

Newport Beach is an odd place. It’s our backyard. We love it. We hate it. It is a juxtaposition of some of the world’s worst culture next to some pretty awesome people and places. And the waves can be as fun as anywhere on earth. It’s a place where the iconic Frog House surf shop exists…

Eating and Drinking in Barcelona A Radical Class note pad from the Med

I was sitting in traffic the other day after a long day at work and got a whiff of someone’s cigarette in a passing car. The smoke took me back to a far away place. A place where you can float in the Mediterranean Sea, where everyone is a wacky strange beautiful. Where the speed…

5 Books to Fuel Your Existential Crisis Don’t have an existential crisis? Get one this weekend

You don’t have to read. Your life is your blank page, scribble as you like. But in our experience, it’s still the best way to begin understanding the complicated, ever-curious thoughts that come into our own minds. To learn that living is living and we’re all going to die. And we don’t mean that to…

what youth drinks

3 Cocktails for Summer What Youth Drinks for a Crowd

When it comes to summer, for me, it doesn’t get much better than a long day at the beach — some waves, some beers, some babes, sun, sand. You all know that and I’m sure do it very well. That’s cake. The icing on the cake is then, instead of everyone going home come sunset,…

what youth derek dunfee

Massive Mexico Derek Dunfee rides and documents ridiculously large Puerto

Editor’s Note: Derek Dunfee does things only a couple of humans on this planet can do: he chases massive waves around the world (completely sponsorless and on his own dime) and has the presence of mind to document with his photos and words. This is as close as you can get to what these guys…

ports cape town south africa what youth

The WY Guide: Cape Town, South Africa The tip of the world

The WY Guide to Cape Town, South Africa by C.S. Louis

The WY Guide: New Zealand Coffee, wine, waves and music

New Zealand sits next to Australia on a map, but often below it on bucket lists. A long flight to go for somewhere not Australia. But that’s what makes it such a jewel. It’s the underground choice. The sleepier cousin of the mate above them, New Zealand is a place that offers a lot of discovery, peaceful head space and…

The WY Guide: The Gold Coast With Jack Freestone and C.S. Louis

Welp, you know what time it is: “Time to fuck the WSL!” No, we kid, calm down. But for reals, lots of our friends and enemies will have their eyes on Snapper and the Gold Coast the next few days, and since we enjoy a little shindig as much as the next guy, we thought we’d give…

radical class carnitas what youth

What Youth Eats: Homemade Carnitas Radical Class with Adam Warren

A damn good way to spend a Sunday

Radical Class: 11 Photo Books You Need With Photographer Darren Ankenman

Photographer Darren Ankenman and the books you need to get

quiksilver new vibe what youth

Radical Class: Industry Talk 7 things catching our eye

Quiksilver used to have a slogan that said: “If you can’t rock and roll, don’t fucking come.” It was fun, punk and had some damn moxie. I’d wear that! But then Quiksilver became cautious and scared and you didn’t hear much from them unless you looked at the back of your dad’s t-shirt. This is…

Sign up for letters from What Youth


By enabling this page, you are acknowledging and accepting our privacy terms and conditions.