It is the rare day
that Mr. O-P., resident salmon cooker, does much cooking any more, but
something about blood orange season inspired him and, one afternoon, I found
him paging through his self-created cookbook of our favorite salmon
recipes.
This one dates back to a 2001
issue of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
We’d tried it back then, loved it enough to try it a number of months later, and
then the recipe was pushed to the back of the bulging binder, not to be rediscovered
until yesterday. It’s a good one, ample enough on its own with the delicious
wilted greens as a base to serve with nothing more than a chilled glass of wine
and crusty slice of bread. It’s a lovely and quite romantic dish, so would be
perfect if you’re planning something extraordinary for Valentine’s Day this
year.
Seared Five-Spice Salmon
with Gingered Blood Oranges
4 Atlantic salmon
filets, skinned & boned
Chinese Five-Spice
Powder
Sea Salt
Freshly ground black
pepper
Canola oil
1 tablespoon peeled
fresh ginger, cut into julienne strips
Dried red pepper
flakes, to taste
½ cup julienned red
onion
4 Belgian endives,
core removed and cut into julienne strips
¼ freshly squeezed regular
orange juice
2 tablespoons honey
2 cups baby spinach
leaves
4 tablespoons
cilantro, chopped, divided
Peel four blood
oranges and cut into segments. Juice remaining blood oranges, set segments and juice
aside.
Preheat a nonstick
9 to 10-inch skillet over medium-high heat. Dust surface of each salmon fillet
with Chinese five-spice powder, sea salt, and black pepper, to taste. Drizzle a
few drops of canola oil into the pan to moisten, then add salmon, cooking to
sear well.
Turn salmon over,
reduce heat to medium. Cook salmon to desired degree of doneness. Remove
salmon, tent with foil, and keep warm while sauce cooks.
In another 9 to 10-inch
nonstick skillet, heat a few drops of oil over medium-high heat. Add ginger and
red pepper flakes. Saute just a minute to release flavors. Add onion, saute
until it softens, 2-3 minutes. Add endive, cook to wilt, 1 minute more. Stir in
orange juices and honey; cook until liquid is reduced to coat vegetables.
Season to taste with salt and pepper. Add spinach leaves and saute to wilt,
about 1 more minute. Stir in blood orange segments and 2 tablespoons cilantro.
Remove vegetables
from sauce with tongs, and mound in the center of warm serving plates. Place
salmon carefully on top of vegetables. Spoon remaining sauce (there won’t be much)
over salmon. Top with remaining cilantro. Serve immediately.
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Bonjour chère amie,
ReplyDeleteJ'en profite pour vous présenter mes voeux de joie, de bonheur et d'amour pour 2016.
C'est vraiment étrange comme ressentiment ! Pas plus tard que la semaine dernière j'ai réalisé du saumon au citron vert/gingembre en papillote à la sauce soja.
Aujourd'hui je découvre votre recette qui me donne envie de la tester.
Vos photos me donnent l'eau à la bouche.
Merci pour cet excellent partage.
En ce qui concerne ma recette :
J'ai mélangé les zestes de mon citron vert + le jus avec le gingembre ciselé finement dans un plat j'y ai ajouté 1 cuillère à soupe d'huile d'olive, 2 de sauce soja + poivre. J'ai mis mes morceaux de poisson dans cette sauce à mariner environ 30 minutes.
Puis j'ai réalisé mes papillotes en ajoutant la sauce au poisson dans la papillote.
Je vous souhaite une excellente journée.
Gros bisous ♡
ReplyDeleteThis really sounds so good - I will try it next time I buy some salmon.
Have a great weekend.
Mary
Oh my that is impressive and gosh it sounds mouth-watering, especially with those wilted greens. The seared salmon, the spices and blood orange with cilantro - omg! Does he plate his own creations too?
ReplyDeleteWow...this sounds so delicious!
ReplyDeleteThanks for joining Cooking and Crafting with J & J!