Categories
fish food potatoes

beached salmon (or, heston’s fish pie simplified)

I love reading In Search of Heston’s recipes. United by our passion for all things Blumenthal-flavoured, he goes the whole hog in attempting to recreate Heston’s entire recipe index. And he really pushes the boat out to make them as accurately to the original text as possible.

One of his recent posts was Heston’s fish pie. I’ve kind-of blogged about this before. Phil went all the way and made every element, taking him over two days and eventually eating the finished dish at 3.38am one bank holiday Monday morning. It sounded quite the ordeal. He also related how fellow Blumenthaler Kita had a similarly delayed dinner, with many steps resulting in an excellent meal for a lot of effort.

I wanted to pay tribute to that effort, and capture the spirit of the fish pie but have a version that could be made for a weekday dinner. So here’s my beached salmon: the major components of Heston’s fish pie reduced (dare I say deconstructed?) to a portion of salmon with pommes purees, sauce and crunch topping (the “sand”).

The potatoes take about 45 minutes, but the vast majority of it is unattended. Whilst it may sound long-winded with the two-stage temperatures, it’s the only way to achieve the silky-smoothness this recipe deserves. The salmon is simple, enhanced only by miso in lieu of a full cure. The sauce is the main binding ingredient and that’s where the power is. With a sauce rich in vermouth (Cinzano is one of the few spirits we always have in the cupboard) and cream it gives a luxurious finish. You can add improvements yourself with the quality of the stock you use, using fish offcuts if available.

It may not be 3 days worth of toil and can’t hope to compare to the original, but hopefully there’s enough flavours in to call back to the Heston recipe.

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beached salmon (or, heston’s fish pie simplified)

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

_For the salmon:_

  • 2 salmon steaks
  • 1 tablespoon white miso paste

_For the sauce:_

  • 1 onion finely sliced
  • 1 star anise
  • 1 clove of garlic crushed
  • 20 ml vermouth
  • 20 ml white wine
  • 100 ml fish stock
  • 50 ml double cream

_For the pommes purees:_

  • 200 g Charlotte potatoes peeled and sliced into 5mm slices
  • 50 g unsalted butter
  • 30 ml whole milk
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 10 g Comte cheese grated
  • 1 teaspoon wholegrain mustard
  • 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

_For the sand topping:_

  • 10 g panko breadcrumbs
  • 1 nori leaf
  • Pinch salt

_To serve:_

  • 1 teaspoon chopped parsley

Instructions

  • Marinate the salmon first: spread the miso paste evenly over the fish and put to one side until needed.
  • For the potatoes, rinse the slices well under cold water to remove the excess starch. Fill a pan with water and heat to 80C. Add the potatoes and maintain at 70C for 30 minutes.
  • In a small pan, add a little oil and fry the panko until golden brown. Drain on kitchen paper and crush in a pestle and mortar with the nori and salt. Set aside until needed.
  • While the potatoes cook, get on with your sauce. Gently fry the onions in a little butter with the star anise until softened, and then add the garlic. Crank up the heat and add the vermouth and wine. Bubble away, deglazing the pan and reduce by half. Add the stock and cream, remove the star anise and once it hits the boil reducing to a gentle simmer.
  • When the potatoes are ready, drain and rinse then return them to the pan. Add more water, add salt and bring to the boil, simmering for 15 minutes. Put the butter, milk, cheese, mustard and Worcestershire sauce in a bowl and set a sieve over it. When the 15 minutes are up, drain the potatoes well and push through the sieve into the waiting seasonings. Beat well with a spatula to combine and taste for seasoning. If it's ready before everything else, return to the saucepan to keep warm
  • Get a frying pan on medium-hot for your salmon. Fry on the skin side for 4 minutes and flip over until done to your liking.
  • To assemble the dish, add a scoop of potatoes. Add your fish. Check the sauce for seasoning and pour over. Add a sprinkle of parsley and plenty of 'sand'. Serve with mangetout or asparagus.
Categories
chicken food garlic lemon onion oregano paprika parsley potatoes

chimichurri chicken with patatas bravas

England may be out of the World Cup, but there’s still lots of excuses to throw a football party. For people who enjoy a cooking challenge, it presents opportunities to burrow through the regional cookbooks and get inspired. Will you serve the Nigerian jollof rice? German Bratwurst? Australian shrimp? Ghanaian fufu?

Here’s a pair of great Latin-flavoured dishes in celebration of Argentina and Spain. First up is a butterflied chicken breast bursting with vibrant lemon and garlic, partnered with a herby, sharp chimichurri sauce. And as a foil for for that, some fiery patatas bravas made with Britain’s best Jersey Royals.

These dishes scale up really well for a party, football-flavoured or otherwise: the chicken is a breast per person, and I make mine on a George Foreman grill so there’s always a couple on the go. You can make miles of the chimichurri sauce and leave it out for people to help themselves. And you can make a big vat of patatas bravas which is perfectly good at room temperature.

The brining stage for the chicken isn’t essential; but it does help keep the chicken marvellously moist and is another stage at which you can add layers of flavour.

Want more football-themed party food ideas? Check out Waitrose’s page here. My recipes are inspired by theirs:

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chimichurri chicken with patatas bravas

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

For the brine:

  • Water mixed with 8% salt
  • 2 tablespoons golden syrup
  • 10 black peppercorns
  • 1 star anise
  • 4 skinless chicken breast fillets

For the chicken:

  • 4 cloves garlic roughly chopped
  • 2 teaspoons smoked paprika
  • Grated zest of 1 lemon
  • 1 red onion roughly chopped
  • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar

For the chimichurri Sauce:

  • Pinch chilli flakes
  • 25 g flat leaf parsley roughly chopped
  • 15 g oregano roughly chopped
  • 750 g Jersey Royal Potatoes halved
  • 1 onion thinly sliced
  • 190 g chorizo diced
  • 6 tomatoes roughly chopped

For the patatas bravas:

  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • Squeeze of lemon juice
  • 25 g flat-leaf parsley roughly chopped

Instructions

  • Combine the brine ingredients and leave the chicken brining for 6 hours. Drain and pat dry when ready.
  • For the chimichurri sauce, bash all the ingredients together in a pestle and mortar. Set aside, seasoning with a little salt and a good grinding of black pepper, adding a little olive oil to bring together.
  • Cook the potatoes in a large pan of boiling water for 15 minutes until tender. Meanwhile, in a large frying pan, heat the oil and cook the onion and chorizo together for 10 minutes. Drain the potatoes and add to the pan with the chorizo and cook for a further 10 minutes.
  • Place the chicken on clingfilm over a chopping board and slice through each fillet horizontally, making sure not to cut all the way through, then open out. Add another layer of clingfilm and bash lightly with a rolling pin to flatten further. Scatter over the garlic, paprika, lemon zest then rub in with a little olive oil and salt & pepper.
  • Grill, barbecue or fry your chicken until thoroughly cooked through. Back at your potatoes, add the tomatoes, chilli and paprika and cook for a further 5 minutes. Squeeze over lemon juice and scatter over parsley.

 

Waitrose compensated me for this post and gave me some party stuff to play with.

Categories
beef food potatoes

roasted beef roasties

We’ve just seen the back of national chip week for another year! That’s the excuse you needed to have chips tonight sorted then. In celebration of this auspicious occasion, Albert Bartlett sent me some Innovator potatoes to try out. They’re a floury general-purpose type so I cooked ’em a bunch of ways. My favourite were these beef dripping-soaked gold nuggets which lit up the Sunday roast.

They made some pretty mean chips too. They were made in the standard ActiFry way, tossed with a little garlic salt. As crisp yet fluffy as you’d expect.

To make these you need to set a rack over your roasting dish. Plonk a beef roasting joint over par-boiled potatoes and let it go to work. I have one of these Retro Roasters with the rack built into it which is perfect. The fats and juices from the meat drip down slowly on to the potatoes which are thirsty for flavour. You’ll get a deep crunch giving way to fudgy-textured spuds, with dark pieces of concentrated beef fat crowding the pan ripe for scooping up with slightly-scorched fingers.

If you’re not dribbling already, there’s something wrong with you. Or vegetarian, I guess. Go try.

Thanks to Albert Bartlett for the spuds to try.

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roasted beef roasties

A way to get deep, savoury flavour into your roast potatoes.
Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 2 kg beef joint such as silverside
  • 1 kg Albert Bartlett Innovator potatoes peeled and chopped (keep the peelings)
  • 1 onion sliced

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 170C.
  • Season the beef joint all over with your favourite flavourings, I like to use salt, pepper, garlic powder and mustard powder, brought together with a little olive oil. Carefully fry the meat all over in a heavy pan, before transferring to the oven.
  • Put the potato peelings in a tied up clean dishcloth. After 30 minutes parboil the potatoes in salted water along with the peelings. After 10 minutes drain thoroughly and discard the peelings.
  • Remove the beef from the oven, add the potatoes and onions to the baking tray and baste well. Return the beef to the roasting dish, on top of a rack over the potatoes if you have one.
  • Roast for a further 45m or until your beef is done. When it's out crank the oven up as high as it will go and continue to cook for a further 15 minutes or until the potatoes are as crisp as you like them. Serve sprinkled with sea salt.
Categories
food lamb leftovers potatoes rosemary stock worcestershire sauce

l & p (lamb & potatoes)

This recipe is a take on a boulangere, potatoes simmered in stock. Made with leftover roast lamb coated in Lea & Perrins what else could I call it but “L&P”, lamb & potatoes. It could be made just as well with beef and slipping a few bits of veg in there wouldn’t go amiss. I served mine with peas in mint butter, and a blob of pickled red cabbage.

I’m not sure I don’t ever have a bottle of Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce in the cupboard. When an instant acidic, savoury pep is required a few splashes brings something to life. When there’s leftovers tasting a little flat or sad, L&P is a great standby.

If you’re looking for more inspiration, check out the Lea and Perrins Worcestershire Sauce YouTube channel. And here are those Sorted chaps making a spaghetti bolognese with it.

Those links up there are sponsored, but don’t let that distract you from a great lamb & potatoes recipe.

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l & p (lamb & potatoes)

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 250 g leftover roast lamb
  • 750 g white potatoes thinly sliced
  • 1 sprig rosemary very finely chopped
  • About 10 tablespoons Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce
  • 400 ml hot chicken stock

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 180C and get a frying pan over a high heat.
  • Add a dash of oil, add the rosemary and the lamb and stir fry for a minute. Splash over the Worcestershire sauce and kep shaking and stirring the pan to coat the meat in a sticky glaze. When the lamb is sticky, remove from the pan.
  • In a baking dish put a layer of half of the potatoes and season well. Add the lamb over the top, then another layer of potatoes and season again. Add the stock until just reaching the tops of the potatoes, cover with foil and bake for about 30 minutes. Remove the foil and bake for another 15 minutes, or until the potatoes are tender.
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