Late Summer Seafood Ideas • 7 Seas Fish Market • Kitsilano, Vancouver
Ceviche Three Ways for the End of Summer
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Late August is the perfect time for ceviche. It is bright, chilled, full of flavour, and ideal for days when you want something fresh without turning dinner into a heavy cooking project.
These three ceviche directions use different seafood and supporting ingredients, so even though they share some familiar elements, they land very differently on the plate. One feels creamy and tropical, one is sweet and vibrant, and one is clean, sharp, and especially good for hot weather.
Quick answer
Prawns, bay scallops, and wild Pacific halibut can all work beautifully in ceviche. Each creates a different result. Prawns feel richer and more rounded, scallops feel sweet and delicate, and halibut gives you a clean, bright ceviche with a firm bite.
Featured seafood ingredients
For these three versions, we built around:
- Prawns
- Bay scallops
- Wild Pacific halibut
These are all available at 7 Seas Fish Market in Kitsilano. If you are planning ceviche at home, starting with seafood you trust matters. Texture, freshness, and clean flavour all show up immediately in a dish like this.
Why ceviche works so well at the end of summer
Ceviche is one of those dishes that feels both light and complete. It gives you acidity, texture, chill, freshness, and enough substance to feel satisfying without weighing you down.
It is also highly adaptable. Change the seafood, fruit, herbs, or heat level, and the whole experience shifts. That makes it one of the best formats for side-by-side summer inspiration.
For people who still want something exciting late in the season but do not want a heavy meal, ceviche is a very smart choice.
Is ceviche the right direction for your meal?
- Choose ceviche if you want something bright, cold, and refreshing.
- Choose it if you want seafood to stay front and centre.
- Choose it if you want a dish that feels lively without a lot of hot cooking.
- Skip it if you are looking for a heavier, richer comfort meal.
1. Prawn ceviche
This version leans tropical and a little creamy, thanks to avocado and coconut milk. The prawns give it body, while the mix of lime, lemon, and orange keeps it bright.
Yellow pepper, cucumber, green onion, shallot, and jalapeño bring colour, crunch, and heat. It is a more layered ceviche, and a good fit if you want something that feels substantial without losing the freshness that makes ceviche so appealing.
This recipe by James Heras is available on YouTube, and it is a strong choice if you want a ceviche that feels vivid, generous, and easy to share.
2. Scallop ceviche
Scallop ceviche feels softer and sweeter than the other two directions. Mango, avocado, red onion, cilantro, jalapeño, lime, and salt all work with the scallops rather than competing with them.
The result is bright but delicate, which makes this a strong option when you want something a little more elegant or a little less assertive than a heavier citrus-and-pepper combination.
This recipe by Maggie Unzueta from Mamá Maggie’s Kitchen is a good reminder that ceviche can feel luxurious even when it stays simple.
3. Halibut ceviche with pineapple and avocado
This version is especially well suited to hot weather because it feels clean, crisp, and refreshing. Wild Pacific halibut, lime, red onion, pineapple, jalapeño, cilantro, and avocado create a ceviche that is bright without being too busy.
The pineapple adds sweetness, the halibut keeps the dish structured, and the avocado softens the sharper edges. It is one of the most balanced ways to do a fruit-forward ceviche.
If you want a version that feels coastal, seasonal, and a little more West Coast in spirit, this is a very strong place to land.
Which ceviche fits your mood best?
Choose prawn ceviche if...
You want something fuller, creamier, and more colourful with a tropical feel.
Choose scallop ceviche if...
You want something sweeter, softer, and a little more elegant.
Choose halibut ceviche if...
You want the cleanest, brightest, most heat-friendly option of the three.
Want more seafood recipe ideas?
These three ceviche directions are a strong place to start, but they are only part of what you can do with fresh seafood in late summer.
For more seafood inspiration and recipe ideas, visit Recipro.
Shop seafood for ceviche at 7 Seas Fish Market
Prawns, bay scallops, and wild Pacific halibut are all available at 7 Seas Fish Market in Kitsilano.
Ceviche is one of those dishes where ingredient quality shows up immediately. If you are planning to make it at home, it helps to start with seafood you feel good about serving.
Quick questions people ask
What seafood works best for ceviche?
Firm, fresh seafood works best. Prawns, bay scallops, and halibut each create a different style of ceviche with different textures and flavour profiles.
How long should ceviche marinate?
Marinating time depends on the seafood and the result you want, but many versions only need a short time in citrus before serving.
What makes one ceviche feel different from another?
The seafood choice, fruit, herbs, heat, and added creaminess or sweetness can all change the texture, balance, and overall feel of the dish.
Is halibut a good fish for ceviche?
Yes. Halibut is a very good option because it has a clean flavour and a firm texture that holds up well in a citrus-based preparation.
Where can I buy seafood for ceviche in Vancouver?
7 Seas Fish Market in Kitsilano carries seafood that works well for ceviche, including prawns, scallops, and wild Pacific halibut.
End summer with something bright
Ceviche is one of the best ways to finish the season with energy still on the plate. It is fresh, flexible, and easy to shape around the seafood and flavours you are in the mood for.
Start with seafood from 7 Seas Fish Market, then choose the ceviche direction that fits your day best.
Explore three fresh ceviche ideas with prawns, scallops, and halibut, then shop the seafood at 7 Seas Fish Market in Kitsilano.
Author bio
About the Author
James Heras is a second-generation seafood professional and part of the family behind 7 Seas Fish Market, a Vancouver institution serving the city for 60 years. Raised in the business, James has worked hands-on across nearly every part of the seafood supply chain, from retail counter and processing floors to wholesale distribution and restaurant sales.
With more than 30 years of industry exposure, James brings practical, real-world knowledge of seafood sourcing, quality assessment, cold-chain handling, sustainability standards, and how fish should be selected, stored, and prepared at home. He works closely with fishermen, processors, chefs, and buyers across Western Canada and the Pacific Rim, giving him a grounded, end-to-end perspective that goes far beyond theory.
His writing focuses on helping customers make confident seafood decisions, cutting through confusion with clear, experience-based guidance rooted in decades of daily practice.
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