My original plan was to make a scallop and salmon dish, but I have to call it salmon and scallops now. Who knew how hard it would be to buy some scallops? Luckily, I grabbed the last packet of frozen ones, on the shell. Hilariously, the checkout lady invited herself to dinner when she saw we were having seafood. Mr P. and I used to think this particular lady was a grumpy old thing, but turns out she is hilarious! Never judge a book by its cover, my friends. As I said to Mr P.: 'She is just dry, wickedly dry.'
ready for serving (caramelised not burnt - honest) |
This is a dish that you eat at room temperature rather than hot. Almost like a salad. You could throw some green leaves on your plate, if you wish. You can toast and chop the nuts earlier in the day; you can make the purée and leave it till dinner time; chop the herbs and leave till ready to serve. And the edamame can be boiled and shelled in the afternoon, too. While this recipe may look like War and Peace, it's actually incredibly quick and easy to make!
Original recipe by Sherry's Pickings
Serves 3:
ingredients:
For the salmon:
460g./1 pound salmon fillets, skin-on
juice of 1 orange (mine had c. 80 mL/2.7 fl oz)
1 tbs mandarin agrumato oil, or plain EV olive oil
2 tsp shichimi togarashi
1/2 tsp gochugaru
2 tsp black sesame oil
1 tsp white sesame seeds
1 tsp black sesame seeds
sea salt and ground black pepper, to taste
Don't forget the scallops! I had 6 of 'em, roe-less (but have as many as you want, my dears)
The edamame:
400g./14 oz packet of frozen edamame - you will end up with approx. 110g./4 oz of beans after shelling
2-3 tsp lemon agrumato oil or EV olive oil with a dash of lemon juice
sea salt and ground black pepper, to taste
Chickpea purée:
1 tin (400g./14 oz) chickpeas, drained
1-2 garlic cloves, crushed or finely chopped
zest and juice of 1 lemon
1-2 tbs olive oil
1/4 cup water
sea salt and black pepper, to taste
For serving:
50g./1.8 oz macadamias, toasted and chopped
a really biiiig handful of parsley, chopped
a small bundle of chives, chopped
Method:
Chop the fish into biggish chunks (5cm x 5cm/2 in x 2 in), and throw them into a large mixing bowl with the scallops
Add the orange juice, mandarin agrumato oil, shichimi togarashi, gochugaru, sesame oil, sesame seeds, salt and pepper
Give it a biiiig stir so the fish is well coated, and put aside while you put together the other parts of this dish (I left mine for about an hour, 'cos I had to finish watching my fave tv show where Bob Ross paints his happy little trees)
Edamame:
Boil the edamame in salted water for about 5 minutes (as per the packet), let them cool, shell them, and put aside while you make the purée
The purée:
Drain the chickpeas (keep the pea water for vegan meringues)
Tip them into a small food processor; add the garlic, lemon zest, juice, olive oil, water, salt and pepper and ... blitz! till smooth (ish)
The fish:
Grab your non-stick grill plate/pan, and get it nice and hot on your stove top/burner/hob - whatever you call it
Now let (your) Mr P. do his thing: the salmon gets a few minutes per side on the very hot grill plate/pan. Mr P. said to tell you that the fish needs to be grilled skin side first, and then on all sides. And that the grill needs to be damn hot!
Take the fish out when it's how you like it (a wee bit rare for us); whack in the scallops for a minute or two on each side, then add them to the pile of salmon
Now add the oil, salt and pepper in with the edamame, and stir together
Grab a plate, help yourself to some salmon and scallops; then a goodly amount of the purée, and the edamame, and scatter the nutty herbs over your plate
For serving:
Chop the nuts and herbs, mix together well in a small bowl
Scatter this tasty mix over your heaped plate of fish
Notes:
Use salmon without the skin if you wish
Lemon or lime juice is fine if you don't have an orange
Try a lemon agrumato/olive oil, or any citrus oil of your choice
Shichimi togarashi is a Japanese spice mix with seven ingredients
Gochugaru are Korean chilli flakes
Use ordinary sesame oil if you can't find the black one
(I forgot to marinate the scallops, so they were grilled with a bit of the marinade after the salmon was cooked)
I bought nuts which were already toasted, so I only had to chop them (throw them into a small, dry frypan for a few minutes tossing if you have raw ones)
stir the fish and the marinade together, and let it sit for a while |
boil and shell the edamame |
(Interesting fact about soybeans - i.e. edamame - there is/are only ever 1-3 beans in the pod.) My drawing has 4 beans, but don't tell anyone...
zap the chickpeas into a purée |
smooth and delicious purée |
grill the fish |
chop your nuts |
mix the chopped nuts and herbs together |
ready for serving |
and for eating |
artwork © Sherry's Pickings |
This looks like a fantastic meal with lots of healthy protein and omega3 :-))
ReplyDeletethanks angie. we really enjoyed it!
DeleteThis looks and sounds delicious
ReplyDeletethank you anne. it is tasty, and you can feel it doing you good:)
DeleteWow this is my kind of meal! its so spot on.
ReplyDeletethanks muchly raymund!
DeleteSounds like a great fusion dish Sherry. So did you invite her, or not?
ReplyDeletehi abbe
Deletenope we didn't invite her:) but now we know she's a hoot!
We'll never turn down scallops! Or salmon, for that matter. This looks lovely -- nifty combo of flavors. Thanks!
ReplyDeletethank you KR!
DeleteI'm up for anything with seafood and this looks amazingly tasty. I don't do much Japanese cooking, but I love to eat it. I should hunt down those ingredients and try this. I am amazed at how difficult it is to buy scallops these days as well. Great recipe Sherry.
ReplyDeletehi pauline
Deletei have a bit of a happy thing about japanese food, and i love the Korean gochugaru! Mr P. likes to put it in everything. yes what's with the scallop shortage:)? Thanks!
That looks very tasty! Haha yes I often find first impressions really deceiving! Wouldn't it be funny if she turned up!
ReplyDeletethank you! Funny how it is easy to get some people wrong at a first glance...
DeleteThe taste is a pure bliss!
ReplyDeletewell thank you dennis! too kind.
DeleteMy frozen edamame are already shelled, and now I think I’ll use them with my next fish preparation. Great ideas here!
ReplyDeletebe safe... mae at maefood.blogspot.com
really? pre-shelled? lucky. thanks!
DeleteNice!!! Loving that marinade. The lesson about a book's cover is something I really tried to get through to my girls.
ReplyDeletethanks mimi! yes we all need to consider our opinions well...
DeleteLooks very delicious Sherry xo
ReplyDeletethank you Michaela. it was!
DeleteWhat an interesting dish - it looks both yummy and healthy.
ReplyDeleteAmalia
xo
hi amalia
Deleteyou're right:) very tasty and good for you too.
Sherry, what a beautiful meal! And I love a meal that is good at room temperature. It simplifies my life!
ReplyDeleteoh yes for sure Jean.
DeleteSo you had the checkout lady over for dinner? What a fun adventure! Speaking of fun, I love the combination of edamame with seafood here. This sounds like a delicious recipe, and I'm also intrigued by the macadamia nuts in there!
ReplyDeletenope we didn't but it would have been fun. i am a huge fan of edamame, and it goes so well with fish. macadamias are an aussie native nut and grow a bit south of here. they went well with this dish too:)
DeleteDelicious proteins packed plate, chickpea looks so creamy and delicious! I love the nuts and herbs mix, totally I am tempted with the flavors, Sherry!
ReplyDeletethanks aarthi. we enjoyed this!
DeleteWhoa, this sounds good! How on earth did you get Mr. P. to eat fish and seafood? Nice going!
ReplyDeletehubby likes salmon!
DeleteWell, that is great. I thought all fish was out of the question!
Deletehe just doesn't eat shellfish:)
DeleteLooks like a feast!
ReplyDelete