Fillet of halibut with samphire and chanterelles by Neil Forbes – Cafe St Honoré
Get your fishmonger to do the hard work and fillet the fish for you. As an alternative to halibut, try hake, or smoked haddock works well. Fish goes really well with chanterelles and it’s the start of the mushroom season here in Scotland, so these vibrant orange fungi are easily foraged. If you do go picking, be careful and make sure you know what you are doing.
Salty samphire brings all the flavours together nicely. It grows wild on coastal marsh areas in East Lothian but you should get permission from the landowner before any form of foraging.
For more information visit www.cafesthonore.com
Ingredients: Serves 4
4 x 175g halibut fillets, farmed Gigha Halibut is great
1 handful of British samphire, washed
2 handfuls of chanterelle mushrooms, cleaned
A few flowers from the garden, I like nasturtium leaves and flowers, borage is pretty too
2 tablespoons of Scottish cold pressed rapeseed oil
150g butter
Juice of a lemon
Some fennel fronds, optional
Good salt and pepper
Method:
1. Season the fish all over.
2. Heat a frying pan and a pot on the hob, bringing both to moderate heat.
3. Add the oil and the fish to the frying pan and leave for a couple of minutes. Then add half the butter and the mushrooms to the pot, followed by the samphire and season. Keep tossing, being careful not to burn the butter.
4. Meanwhile, check the fish. It should be starting to turn golden brown on the underside. Once it is, turn each fillet over and continue cooking.
5. Add the remaining butter to the frying pan. It will start to froth and become lovely and nut brown in colour. Season the fish again and squeeze in the lemon juice, a few drops at a time. If you like, add some fennel fronds at this stage, as they will flavour the butter well.
6. When the mushrooms and samphire are just soft, season again and spoon into the centre of four warmed plates. Place the fish on top and decorate with the flowers and a few more drops of lemon juice.
n association with Taste Communications, Scotland’s food and drink communications company www.tastecommunications.co.uk
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