During my Aldi excursion last
week I bought a package of frozen fillets of sole. Now, I am not a buyer of
frozen fish. Ever. These were on sale, and it was purely an impulse buy. When I
got home, I wondered what I was going to do with these. I decided to look
around for some recipes and came upon Andrew Zimmerman’s recipe for Sole
Meunière. It looked incredibly easy (it was), and I had all of the ingredients
on hand, so I figured why not.
This ended up being one of my favorite 30-minute
meals. The capers do have to be soaked for 45 minutes to get the salt out of
them, so you have to plan a little bit ahead. I put a small potato into the
oven to bake for those 45 minutes, so that by the time the fish was finished
the potato would be as well. The peas I just microwaved for a minute until they
were done. I sat down in front of the fire with the most delicious plate of
restaurant-quality food, and was enormously proud of myself. You have to try
this. It is SO good!
Sole Meunière
Adapted from
Andrew Zimmerman
2 5-ounce sole fillets
Kosher salt
Pepper
1/3 cup all-purpose flour
1-2 T. unsalted butter
1/3 cup dry white wine
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, thinly sliced
1 tablespoon minced parsley
In a small bowl, soak the capers in cold water for 45 minutes.
Drain and pat dry.
Season the fish with salt and pepper. In a shallow bowl, whisk
the flour with 1/2 teaspoon each of salt and pepper. Dredge the fillets in flour
and shake off any excess; transfer to a platter.
In a large skillet, melt unsalted butter
over moderately high heat. Add sole fillets to the skillet and cook, turning
once, until golden brown on both sides, about 4 minutes total. Transfer to a
platter.
Add the capers to the skillet and cook over moderately high heat
until lightly browned and fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add the white wine and
lemon juice and cook over moderately high heat until reduced to 2 tablespoons,
about 1 minute.
Remove the skillet from the heat and add the butter, a few
pieces at a time, whisking until the butter is melted before adding more. Add
half of the parsley and season the sauce with salt and pepper. Pour the warm
sauce over the sole and garnish with the remaining parsley. Serve immediately.
This wonderful recipe for Flounder with Champagne Grapes can be made with sole as well. Delish!
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6 comments:
This looks so good Pattie. Do the capers have to be soaked - are they just too salty otherwise? I've not cooked with them before, only had them in a restaurant. We are going to Aldi's on Friday and will check out their frozen fish section. :)
The recipe said to soak them, so I did. I think it was more to lessen the pickle-y taste, although they can be salty. I'll make this again and may or may not soak them. And I can't imagine that this was helpful at all. :-)
Hmmm I have some tilapia, and I'll bet that would be good, too. Thanks for the recipe, Pattie!
This looks so yummy ... and I love fish... Thanks for the capers tip... If it tasted good and the recipe suggested it well..just enjoy I love trying new things... You always display your food so beautifully.
Can't wait to see what you make next ...Valentine Hugs
This looks delicious! We love capers too.
We sure have enjoyed featuring your delicious recipe this week and I just pinned it! Hope you are having a great day and thanks so much for sharing with us at Full Plate Thursday!
Miz Helen
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