The
fishermen I know are generally traditional in their tastes. And why
not, when you have plentiful fresh fish and fantastic raw ingredients
like olive oil, tomatoes, peppers, garlic and almonds as well as simple, timeworn recipes. I
can well imagine someone having tried any species of fish 'al
romescu' being reluctant to try another style of preparation. Why
bother when something is already sublime. The thing is that there
are many sublime ways that really fresh fish can be prepared
(although there are none that can redeem long-dead ones). Olive oil is fitting in that it smacks of vibrancy and light compared
with the clogging heaviness of other fats but there are times when
nothing can better butter.
So
when a damaged, unsaleable sole (solea solea) comes up in the
net it's time to break out the butter and the flour for a classic
sole meurnière. In her book French Provincial Cooking
Elizabeth David praises la Mère Brazier's fine Lyonais bistro for
providing what 'I do truly believe to be the most delicious and
deliciously cooked sole meurnière I have ever eaten.' and
goes on to question what passes for the dish in London restaurants.
So despite this being generally considered a simple dish there is
some historic pressure to get it right. David also astutely lists the
problems of preparing sole meurnière for a dinner party in
the domestic kitchen highlighting the size of the fish as one of the
drawbacks. Unfortunately this is no longer quite so applicable and
most soles these days (at least in the Mediterranean) will fit
comfortably into a large frying pan. However, her point about using
clarified butter remains valid.
Clarified
butter can withstand higher cooking temperatures without burning and
is easy to make in small or large quantities. Having prepared the
butter the next factor that needs to be exactly right is the quantity
of flour. Meurnière means miller's wife, and I find that the
image of a county maiden in clogs, beating flour from her apron helps avoid coating the fish
too thickly. Season
the flour before lightly dusting the sole.
Heat the clarified butter in a frying pan, add the sole and cook on both sides
until golden. While the fish is frying make some noisette butter.
Take some normal, unsalted butter and melt it in a small pan until light brown and nutty-smelling, remove the pan from the heat and place in cold water to arrest further cooking.
Transfer the golden sole from the frying pan to a warm plate, immediately squeezing lemon juice over it. Season again then pour
over the noisette butter.
3 comments:
Hi Ben, nice blog and a wonderful boat! I'm doing the model right now, plans to start the real boat in November. Could we get together sometime to chat about details of construction?
Best regards,
Johan. ( Costa Brava )
Hi Johan, which boat are you thinking of building? The light trow Mark 1 or 2, or the Ella skiff? I'd be happy to answer any questions you might have.
Ben
Hi Ben, did you get the message?
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