Huachinango A La Veracruzana (Red Snapper, Veracruz Style)
- 3 cloves garlic, chopped
- 1 unsprayed lemon, juiced, peel reserved
- 1 unsprayed lime, juiced
- 3 tablespoons water
- 1 teaspoon cloves
- salt and pepper to taste
- 3 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 6 skin-on fillets red snapper, scaled and cleaned well
- 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/2 cup vegetable or chicken stock
- 1 onion, halved and sliced
- 1 pinch dried oregano
- 1 bay leaf
- 1/2 cup raisins
- 1/2 cup tomato puree (fresh is best)
- 1 cup diced tomatoes, fresh if available
- about 5 pickled jalapenos, sliced (adjust to taste)
- 1 cup green olives, with pimento if available
- 1/4 cup olive brine
- 2 tablespoons capers
- 2 tablespoons fresh parsley or cilantro, chopped
- In large nonreactive bowl, combine garlic, lemon juice, lime juice, water, and cloves and mix to combine. Reserve the lemon rind -- you'll add that back in at the end. Add snapper fillets, coat each fillet with marinade, and leave to marinate in the fridge about 10 minutes.
- In deep saute pan or shallow braising pan, preferably non-stick, over medium heat, add 3 tablespoons vegetable oil. When oil is hot but not smoking, add fillets skin side down, in a single layer, and cook until skin has crisped and released from pan, about 5 minutes. If necessary, do this step in batches -- you really don't want to crowd the pan.
- When skin has crisped, transfer fillets to large plate and set aside.
- Pour off any fat that has accumulated at bottom of pan above 1 tablespoon. Add onions, and saute until softened, 2 minutes. Add stock, bay, oregano, raisins, tomatoes, and tomato puree, and reduce heat to low. Cover and simmer about 10 minutes, until tomatoes have softened and flavors begin to come together.
- Add pickled jalapenos, olive brine, capers, reserved lemon rind, and half the olives. Cover and continue to simmer 5 minutes more.
- Carefully add fillets back into pan in single layer, skin side up. Cook, uncovered, about 10 minutes, until fish is cooked all the way through but still tender and flaky. Add in reserved olives about 2 minutes before finishing; they should be warm, but retain that fresh flavor.
- To serve, two options: Either bring the braising pan to the table and present the dish family-style, or spoon a scoop of sauce onto each plate and top with a skin side up fillet. Either way, sprinkle the chopped parsley or cilantro overtop and serve immediately.
garlic, unsprayed lemon, unsprayed lime, water, cloves, salt, vegetable oil, skin, cinnamon, vegetable, onion, oregano, bay leaf, raisins, tomato puree, tomatoes, adjust, green olives, olive brine, capers, parsley
Taken from food52.com/recipes/992-huachinango-a-la-veracruzana-red-snapper-veracruz-style (may not work)