Muqueca With Pirao
- About 10 cups fish stock
- 2 coconuts for coconut milk
- 1 cup olive oil
- 5 garlic cloves, peeled and thinly sliced
- 4 medium onions, thinly sliced
- 2 large ripe tomatoes, peeled, seeded and chopped
- 1 cup chopped parsley
- 2 bay leaves
- 1 tablespoon fresh oregano, or 1 teaspoon dried
- Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
- 3 dozen medium-sized shrimp in shell
- 3 pounds snapper or grouper fillets with skin (heads and trimmings reserved for steps 8 and 12)
- 1 cup manioc flour
- 3 tablespoons dende oil (see note)
- 2 teaspoons hot pimente oil or tabasco
- Prepare the stock and coconut milk a day or two ahead.
- Coat a large nonreactive (such as glass or enamel) saute pan with a half cup of the olive oil and place over medium-high heat.
- Saute the garlic in the oil just until golden, about four or five minutes.
- Add the onions and cook just until wilted, stirring frequently, about five or six minutes more.
- Add the tomatoes, parsley and seasonings.
- Heat thoroughly and add one cup of fish stock and four cups prepared coconut milk.
- Bring to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer for 15 minutes.
- Cool and reserve.
- (This can be prepared a day ahead.)
- Salt and pepper the shrimp and refrigerate.
- Cut the fish fillets, checking for stray bones, into one-and-a-half-inch cubes, salt and pepper the cubes and refrigerate.
- Over medium heat, bring eight cups of fish stock to a simmer.
- Add the fish heads and trimmings to the stock, simmer for 15 minutes, strain and reserve the heads and keep the stock warm.
- Heat the remaining olive oil in a nonreactive saute pan over medium-high heat.
- Add the shrimp and saute briefly, until they are pink.
- Remove and reserve the shrimp.
- Add the fish cubes and saute them until they are golden but not thoroughly cooked.
- Remove and reserve with the shrimp.
- Deglaze the pan with a half cup of the warm fish stock and add the reserved coconut-fish stock mixture and bring to a simmer and keep warm over very low heat.
- To make the pirao, pick away the cheeks and excess meat from the heads and trimmings.
- Combine one cup of the fish meat with about a quarter cup of fish stock and puree in a food processor or electric blender.
- In a medium-sized heat-proof bowl, add the manioc flour and whisk in the heated stock a little at a time until it is the consistency of farina.
- Whisk in the fish puree, one tablespoon of dende oil and one teaspoon of pimente oil, or to taste.
- Cover and keep warm over a pan of simmering water while you finish cooking the fish.
- Raise the heat and bring the coconut-fish mixture to a simmer.
- Add the shrimp, cubed fish and their juices and bring to a simmer.
- Add the remaining two tablespoons of dende and one teaspoon of pimente oil.
- Transfer to a heated soup tureen or wide shallow soup plates and accompany with the pirao, slaw and boiled rice.
- Usually the shrimp are served in their shells and the shells eaten.
- If they are to be peeled - then they should be peeled just before reheating in the coconut-fish stock mixture.
fish stock, coconuts, olive oil, garlic, onions, tomatoes, parsley, bay leaves, fresh oregano, salt, shrimp, snapper, flour, dende oil, pimente oil
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/10714 (may not work)