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  1. Halibut Fillets with Roasted Tomato Vinaigrette

  2. Poached Salmon with Basil Bread Crumbs

  3. Fried Calamari, Two Ways

  4. Garlic-Chipotle Chile Mayonnaise


Book Description

Unlike cooks elsewhere, Americans can be notoriously hesitant to cook fish at home. Great Fish, Quick will have you piscatorially challenged cooks serving aquatic creatures at home as often and easily as you serve chicken breasts. With these recipes, you can get your friends to try new fish dishes with an appealing American stamp. Leslie Revsin divides Great Fish, Quick into three sections, grouping 27 kinds of seafood into Delicate White-Fleshed Fillets, Darker-Fleshed Fillets

... (more)


Great Fish, Quick : Delicious Dinners from Fillets and Shellfish

Authors: LESLIE REVSIN

Date: October 1997

ISBN: 0385485387

Publisher: Broadway

Hardcover

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Halibut Fillets with
Roasted Tomato Vinaigrette

Recipe from: Great Fish, Quick
by LESLIE REVSIN
Cookbook Heaven at Recipelink.com

Halibut is one of my favorite fish because of its mild, sweet flavor and big, white, satiny flakes. I like to dip the fillets lightly in bread crumbs before sauteing them, so their tops and bottoms come out pale gold with a pebbly, crunchy texture. The tomatoes are roasted in a very hot oven until their skins blister, which intensifies their flavor and adds a slight smokiness. (It's a basic technique in Mexican cooking.) Then they're pureed, skin and all, with olive oil, a touch of mustard, balsamic vinegar (for roundness), and red wine vinegar (for sharpness) until they turn into a creamy, pumpkin-colored vinaigrette. The vinaigrette is also good with snapper, bass, or sole fillets; tuna or swordfish steaks; and scallops, shrimp, or crab meat. Not to mention roast or grilled vegetables, or spooned over steaming rice or grains!

Serves: 4
Prep and Cooking Time: 40 minutes

  • 1/2 pound ripe plum tomatoes (about 3 medium)

  • 1 garlic clove, sliced

  • 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard, preferably French

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons balsamic vinegar

  • 2 teaspoons red wine vinegar (or 3 1/2 teaspoons vinegar of one type)

  • 1/4 cup olive oil

  • Salt and freshly ground black or white pepper to taste

  • 3-4 tablespoons dry bread crumbs

  • Four 7-ounce halibut fillets, each 3/ 4 " -1 " thick

  • 1 tablespoon butter or olive oil

  • Optional Garnish: 1/2 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves

  1. Preheat the oven to 500 degrees F with the rack at the top for the tomatoes. (You can also use a toaster oven for this.)

  2. Rinse and dry the tomatoes and cut them in half lengthwise. Place them, cut side down, on a baking sheet or pan with a couple of inches between them. Roast the tomatoes until the skins are blistered and popping off, and the flesh is soft when pressed, about 15 minutes. If the skins have blackened a little, all the better-it adds a good smoky flavor.

  3. Remove the pan from the oven and place the tomatoes on a plate to cool for 5 minutes. Lower the oven temperature to 400 degrees.

  4. Place the tomatoes, blistered skins and all, in the jar of a blender (or processor, but the blender makes it smoother) with the garlic, mustard, balsamic and red wine vinegars, and puree them until the mixture is well amalgamated, about 1 minute. While continuing to puree, gradually add the 1/4 cup olive oil until the mixture has become creamy and smooth, 2 to 3 minutes. Season the vinaigrette with salt and pepper and set it aside. (It can be refrigerated for a week, but take it out an hour before serving to remove the chill.)

  5. Place the bread crumbs on a plate. Season both sides of the fillets with salt and pepper and lightly press each side into the bread crumbs. Place a large ovenproof skillet (or 2 medium ones) over medium-high heat with the butter or olive oil (1 1/2 teaspoons per pan, if using 2). When the butter has frothed and subsided (or the olive oil is hot), place the fillets in the skillet, round side down, and saute until they're pale gold, 3 to 4 minutes. Turn them over with a metal spatula and put the skillet in the oven until the fillets are just cooked through, 4 to 6 minutes. To check, place the end of your metal spatula or a paring knife between the flakes of the thickest part of one fillet and gently push the flesh open to see if it is white and opaque throughout; it's ready if it is.

TO SERVE: Place the halibut fillets on warm dinner plates, spoon some of the room-temperature tomato vinaigrette next to each, and sprinkle everything with the thyme, if using it. Serve right away.


More From This Book:

  1. Halibut Fillets with Roasted Tomato Vinaigrette

  2. Poached Salmon with Basil Bread Crumbs

  3. Fried Calamari, Two Ways

  4. Garlic-Chipotle Chile Mayonnaise

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