Seared Wild Striped Bass with Sauteed Spring Vegetables
- Salt
- 1 bunch asparagus, snapped where it wants to naturally break
- 2 cups sugar snap peas, tips and strings removed
- 1 cup shelled fava beans
- Extra-virgin olive oil
- 3 cloves garlic
- 1 cup morel mushrooms, cleaned and cut lengthwise in 1/2
- 1/2 cup chicken or vegetable stock
- 4 (6-ounce) wild striped bass fillets, with skin
- Bring a large pot of well-salted water to a boil.
- Meanwhile, fill a large bowl with ice water and salt it well.
- Place the asparagus in the boiling water and cook until the water comes back to a rolling boil.
- Remove and place it immediately in the salted ice water.
- When the asparagus has cooled completely, remove it from the water and reserve.
- Repeat this process with the sugar snap peas and then the fava beans.
- You can use the same blanching water for all of the veggies, just be sure to always do the fava beans last.
- Fava beans have very high iron content and will turn the blanching water black.
- After the beans are blanched and cooled, remove the tough outer skin to reveal a lovely spring green fava bean.
- Coat a large saute pan with olive oil.
- Smash the three garlic cloves with the heel of your hand and add to the saute pan.
- Bring the pan to a medium high heat.
- When the garlic has become golden brown and very aromatic remove it from the pan and discard it.
- It has fulfilled its garlic destiny.
- Add the mushrooms and stock, season generously with salt, and saute for 1 minute.
- Add the prepared veggies, season with salt and saute until all the ingredients are coated with oil and hot and almost all the stock has evaporated.
- Serve immediately or later at room temperature.
- Take the fish out of the refrigerator about 10 to 15 minutes before using.
- Pat the skin dry with a paper towel and season the fish on both sides with salt.
- Heat a large saute pan coated generously with extra virgin olive oil over high heat.
- Coat the bottom of another slightly smaller saute pan with olive oil.
- Gently place the fish fillets skin side down in the saute pan and place the other saute pan directly on top of the fish.
- The purpose of this is to gently press the skin of the bass onto the bottom of the saute pan to create a lovely crispy fish skin.
- Be sure to oil the bottom of the top saute pan or the fish will stick to it.
- After a couple of minutes remove the top saute pan from the fish, this will allow the steam to escape and the skin to become very crispy.
- As fish cooks it turns from translucent to opaque.
- The idea is to cook the fish 2/3's of the way on the skin side and flip it over for the last 1/3 of the cooking time.
- The rule for fish is about 7 to 8 minutes per inch of thickness, a little less if you like your fish more on the rare side.
- Serve the fish over the sauteed spring veggies and call your self a superstar!
salt, where, sugar snap peas, beans, extravirgin olive oil, garlic, morel mushrooms, chicken, bass fillets
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/anne-burrell/seared-wild-striped-bass-with-sauteed-spring-vegetables-recipe.html (may not work)