PDA

View Full Version : Red Lane Snapper, Spring Onions


Penn
04-01-2012, 14:06
10 Minute prep, 30 minutes slow Roasting time.

Recipe

There really isn't one, basically you can summarize the ingredients on the board and see what we used. It is a one pan dish. What you need to know is that the onions have to rendered as do the cucumbers. A quick sauteed accomplishes this, all that remains is for the additional ingredients to be place in the pan. Once this is completed you place the seasoned fish (S&P), liberally add olive oil and place in a 350^F oven for 30+/- minutes.

Penn
04-01-2012, 14:08
The fish prep for the oven with the oven preset at the desired temperature.

Richard
04-01-2012, 15:04
Looks yummy. :D

Cilantro vice chervil and a mix of sliced red/yellow cherry tomatoes vice the regular tomatoes and a thinly sliced red, yellow, or organge sweet bell pepper in the mix? :confused:

Richard

Penn
04-01-2012, 15:34
Finished cooking time 32minutes +/-, I am in the process of filleting the fish. What this group of photos examples is a perfectly cook 5lb red Lane. No meat sticks to the bone, and the bone is easily extracted from the fish in one piece.

The last photo confirms that the cooking time was spot on as the flesh of the fish flakes.

I started this post at 16:02 and finished the post at 17:34; do the math; that includes table time.

See all that juice in slide 5, well tomorrow I will make a Bouillabaisse Tomorrow.

Quote is extracted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouillabaisse

Bouillabaisse (French pronunciation: [bujabɛs]; Occitan: bolhabaissa [ˌbujaˈbajsɔ]) is a traditional Provençal fish stew originating from the port city of Marseille. The French and English form bouillabaisse comes from the Provençal Occitan word bolhabaissa, a compound that consists of the two verbs bolhir (to boil) and abaissar (to reduce heat, i.e., simmer).
There are at least three kinds of fish in a traditional bouillabaisse, typically scorpionfish (fr: rascasse); sea robin (fr: grondin); and European conger (fr: congre); and it can also include gilt-head bream (fr: dorade); turbot; monkfish (fr: lotte or baudroie); mullet; or silver hake (fr: merlan) It also usually includes shellfish and other seafood such as sea urchins (fr: oursins), mussels (fr: moules); velvet crabs (fr: étrilles); spider crab (fr: araignées de mer) or octopus. More expensive versions may add langoustine (European lobster). Vegetables such as leeks, onions, tomatoes, celery and potatoes are simmered together with the broth and served with the fish. The broth is traditionally served with a rouille, a mayonnaise made of olive oil, garlic, saffron and cayenne pepper on grilled slices of bread.
What makes a bouillabaisse different from other fish soups is the selection of Provençal herbs and spices in the broth; the use of bony local Mediterranean fish; the way the fish are added one at a time, in a certain order, and brought to a boil; and the method of serving. In Marseille, the broth is served first in a bowl containing the bread and rouille, with the seafood and vegetables served separately in another bowl or on a platter.

greenberetTFS
04-02-2012, 05:27
Excellent Chef Penn,you are definitely the man..........;)

Big Teddy :munchin

full cooler
04-02-2012, 05:27
Looks fabulous. The best fishing of the year is the next couple of months. I'll give it a try with some of South Carolina's bounty.