Almond Sole
by Laura C in Rouxbe RecipesFresh sole is pan-fried in clarified butter until golden and finished with slivered almonds, parsley and fresh lemon juice.
| Comments: 20 | Views: 9914 | Success: 100% |
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Fresh sole is pan-fried in clarified butter until golden and finished with slivered almonds, parsley and fresh lemon juice.
| Comments: 20 | Views: 9914 | Success: 100% |
This dish is a wonderful!
I changed the Almonds to blanched sliced Almonds because I thought it complements the fine texture of the Bril Sole better and I had them in the Fridge.
Try the same Recipe on pan-fried Almond Trout with Parsley Potatoes
This is a Keeper.
Klaus āSā
I had a question on butter-based sauces, although my question is not directly related to the cooking of this particular dish. I tried poaching tilapia today (I wanted to use salmon, but realised at the last minute that I had frozen it and my poaching liquid was ready to go) in wine with shallot rings, star anise, scallion-whites and thyme. As I let the fish rest after poaching, I wanted to make a butter sauce to go with it -- butter with thyme in it. I used whole butter, not clarified, and it gave off the impurities that come to the surface when clarifying butter, and made my sauce look specky. Is there any correct way of doing the butter-based sauces, or do I just have to use clarified butter?
Keep in mind this is not a stable butter sauce, so the butter will separate from any other liquids. For a clean look, clarified butter works best. But for flavor from the milk solids and whey in the butter, you'll have to deal with those specks. Toasting the butter actually lightly caramelizes those milk solids to produce an even tastier butter sauce (with brown speck though) called beurre noisette...which means hazelnut butter. So, both ways are correct, one with visual and the other with flavor advantages. Hope this helps.
This recipe is simple and delicious. But it was a little salty I don't know if it was because I was over generous with salt in the flour or because I used butter with salt for the clarified butter, or both. What kind of butter should I use to for this recipe, with or without salt?
By the way, great site, I've learned and so much.
If you cannot find sole, I would try to find something like cod, flounder, John Dory, orange roughy, haddock or pollock, as they are also more delicate.
The tilapia you purchased will still be good, it just won't be quite the same as it is not as delicate in flavor and texture as sole. Hope this helps!
In the past, when I've pan fried fish, it always leaves the house smelling fishy for days. For that reason, I've stayed away from pan frying and stick to baking/roasting/broiling fish. Any suggestions? Am I doing something wrong? I really want to try this recipe, but I'm scared of the smell.
Trisha, I used to avoid pan frying fish because of the fish smell that lingered in my small home (until the next day). I recently found that if I put a humidifier/air purifier on the kitchen counter while I'm cooking, or after, it eliminates the smell! (of course I also keep the fan above the oven on, and a window open, while cooking).
This was my first recipe here and it was fabulous. I substituted Haddock for the Sole as I'm not a big fish lover and wanted to go with one I knew I liked. This will definitely be a do-over and one I'll serve to guests with confidence. I'll look for sole next time to push my fish comfort zone. I served with wild rice and green beans. I kept the lap-top on the kitchen counter for refresher as I cooked and it was so helpful---the dish came out perfect! I never cook fish at home, only have in restaurants. My past attempts resulted in a big mess with minimal success. Following the video there was no splatter (no hours cleaning an oil splatter stove top), no burning, or smoke filled kitchen and perfectly cooked flakey fish. I can't wait to try another fish practice recipe.
Sheila
Depending on the fish you can both skip the milk and flour; however, for sole like in the video, I suggest the method mentioned. Sole is fragile and will benefit from the coating and give you a nice, thin crust. You can skip the milk and also obtain a fairly good crust with flour only. Cheers!
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