Whenever I get home from a holiday, I reminisce by looking
through my photos and remembering all the people I’ve met or visited with and all
the places I’ve been. I also reminisce
about the meals I have eaten. I’m going
back through my summer photos of food because there are so many dinners and salads and
desserts that got made, photographed and eaten with relish, but never got
posted. I am not even home yet and I am
already feeling nostalgic for wild salmon, which I have yet to find in Cairo.
Wild salmon is much drier than its farm-raised brethren so
poaching is an excellent method of cooking it. Add on a creamy caper onion sauce and you
can’t go wrong. I cooked this, along
with a cherry tomato tart, for my in-laws and it was very well received. My father-in-law has been ill and had not
been eating very well for a couple of weeks when I served this and he cleaned his plate! We were all very excited. Seriously.
To the point that we took a photo of his empty plate. Looking back now, that seems weird, but it
felt right at the time. Any small
victory!
Ingredients
For the salmon
4 fillets of salmon
1 cup dry white wine
2-3 cloves garlic, sliced
1 1/2 teaspoons sea salt
For the sauce
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1 small wedge purple onion
2 tablespoons tiny capers
Black pepper
Method
Put your mayonnaise in a small bowl and cut a small wedge
off of your purple onion.
Grate the onion wedge on the fine side of your grater, making sure
to catch the juice.
Add the juice and the grated onion into the mayo bowl with
the capers.
Give the mixture a few good grinds of fresh black pepper and
stir. Set aside. This sauce is always best made ahead to
allow the flavors a chance to meld.
In a saucepan big enough to hold all of your salmon, simmer
the white wine, garlic and salt with enough water added so that the liquid will just
cover your salmon. Remember that when
the salmon is added, the level will rise so don’t overfill.
After about 10 minutes of gentle simmering, add the salmon,
skin side down. Poach for about five
minutes and then turn the salmon over.
Using a spatula, gently remove the skin and set aside.
Remove your salmon from the liquid and set aside. (The poaching liquid can be saved for future
poaching use or it would be a great addition to soup.)
Fry the salmon skin in a non-stick skillet until it is
crunchy. You shouldn’t have to add any
oil to the pan. Drain on some paper
towels and sprinkle with a little sea salt.
Cut the skin into small pieces with a knife or scissors. If your family is anything like mine, hide the crispy salmon skin until you are ready to serve, otherwise you will turn around to find it all gone.
Serve the salmon on a bed of mixed spring greens that are
lightly tossed with garlic vinaigrette or any other light salad dressing. (One
day I’ll post the tomato tart recipe too! Meanwhile, here's a little preview. Cherry tomatoes, sweet peppers and fresh mozzarella balls with toasted pine nuts in a flakey crust. It was pretty and so GOOD!)
Top each salmon fillet with a good couple of spoonsful of
the caper onion sauce and a few of the crispy skin bits.
Enjoy!
I love salmon. Usually, I just coat it with olive oil, salt, pepper and garlic and bake in oven for about 10 minutes. Will have to try your recipe soon.
ReplyDeleteEven if you cook it your way, make the sauce. It just goes so nicely with salmon.
ReplyDeleteI love salmon and I like the way you cooked it. Looks so so delicious, Stacy! Thanks for sharing this fabulous recipe.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anuradha! I love all salmon but I am particularly enamored with the wild caught ones. They have a special flavor that almost reminds me of crab. I know that sounds odd but it's true! And the crispy skin! When we lived in Singapore, I could buy it in a bag like crisps to snack on. So tasty!
ReplyDeleteThis recipe is so simple..and looks delish..I’ll definitely try it soon!
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