Home
Log in / Sign Up
    Private Messages   Advanced Search   Rules   New User Guide   FAQ   Advertise   Contact Us  
Forum -> Recipe Collection -> Fish
Sweet and Sour Salmon with Lemon, Ginger, and Brown Sugar



Post new topic   Reply to topic View latest: 24h 48h 72h

Amarante




 
 
    
 

Post Wed, May 08 2024, 11:43 am
This was a very good version with Ashkenazi flavor profiles - loved the different ways ginger was used

Sweet and Sour Salmon with Lemon, Ginger, and Brown Sugar

Excerpt From: Joan Nathan - My Life in Recipes

I found this recipe for sweet-and-sour carp, one of the dishes my father recalled relishing in Augsburg, in one of the handwritten, well-worn books of favorite recipes that my grandmother Lina Bernheim Nathan passed on to her daughters. Most Friday nights, when the family would gather at Great-Grandmother Rose’s apartment, she would start the meal with a carp dish, especially for Rosh Hashanah. She would use carp or black cod (also called sable); she always used the head and bones to make stock, because they add thickness and flavor to the sauce. And she served it with either a sweet-and-sour or a parsley sauce.

Today I use a large salmon fillet, cutting it raw into individual portions to poach in a fish stock flavored with spices, brown sugar, lemon, gingersnaps (added to give a sweet gingery flavor and dark color, and to thicken the sauce slightly), and then some crystallized ginger to spike the dish even more. It is easy to make, a real crowd-pleaser, and, in a modern way, reminds me oh so much of my childhood.

Makes 12 small slices for an appetizer or 6 servings as a main course

One 3-pound (1⅓-kg) salmon fillet, skinned and cut into 6 or 12 portions
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
About 6 cups (1.4 liters) fish or vegetable stock
3 lemons, 2 thinly sliced and seeded, the other juiced
2 medium onions, sliced into thin rings
1 bay leaf
½ cup (80 grams) raisins
½ teaspoon whole cloves
⅓ cup (71 grams) light- or dark-brown sugar
1 teaspoon ground ginger
6 gingersnaps
2 tablespoons diced crystallized ginger
2 tablespoons chopped fresh dill

1. Season the salmon with salt and pepper to taste in a large heavy-bottomed skillet or Dutch oven large enough to hold the fish in one layer. Add the stock, plus water if needed to barely cover the fish, arrange the lemon and onion slices on top, then drop in the bay leaf, raisins, and cloves. Simmer over medium heat, uncovered, for about 10 minutes, or until the fish is almost cooked through.

2. Add the brown sugar, ground ginger, gingersnaps, and crystallized ginger, and continue cooking for about 5 minutes, taking care not to overcook. You’ll know the fish is cooked if it is firm to the touch; sometimes I pierce a fork into the center to make sure. Once the fish is cool, remove the bay leaf, then transfer the fish to a serving plate. Scatter the onion and lemon slices on top. Boil the liquid over medium-high heat until it has reduced by half, then pour it over the fish.

3. Taste, and drizzle with the juice from the third lemon. Refrigerate until serving, then serve at room temperature, sprinkled with dill.
Back to top
Page 1 of 1 Recent Topics




Post new topic   Reply to topic    Forum -> Recipe Collection -> Fish

Related Topics Replies Last Post
Sugar-free child?
by parsley
12 Today at 8:16 pm View last post
Is sour dough rly healthier??
by amother
22 Today at 3:30 pm View last post
Dd 13yo I used to be a sweet girl
by amother
9 Fri, May 17 2024, 12:55 pm View last post
Gluten free Dairy Free Sugar Free - Need Recipes
by amother
30 Wed, May 15 2024, 8:28 am View last post
Tried and true no sugar blueberry muffin recipe 1 Wed, May 08 2024, 8:32 am View last post