Mark Bittman's Gravlax
- 1 3- to 4-pound cleaned salmon without the head, skin on
- 1 cup salt
- 2 cups brown sugar
- 1 tablespoon freshly ground black pepper
- 1/4 cup spirits, like brandy, gin, aquavit or lemon vodka
- 2 good-size bunches of fresh dill, roughly chopped, stems and all
- Lemon wedges for serving
- Fillet the salmon or have the fishmonger do it; the fish need not be scaled.
- Lay both halves, skin side down, on a plate.
- Toss together the salt, brown sugar and pepper and rub this mixture all over the salmon (the skin too); splash on the spirits.
- Put most of the dill on the flesh side of one of the fillets, sandwich them together, tail to tail, and rub any remaining salt-sugar mixture on the outside; cover with any remaining dill, then wrap tightly in plastic wrap.
- Cover the sandwich with another plate and top with something that weighs a couple of pounds -- some unopened cans, for example.
- Refrigerate.
- Open the package every 12 to 24 hours and baste, inside and out, with the accumulated juices.
- When the flesh is opaque, on the second or third day (you will see it changing when you baste it), slice thinly as you would smoked salmon -- on the bias and without the skin -- and serve with rye bread or pumpernickel and lemon wedges.
salmon, salt, brown sugar, freshly ground black pepper, spirits, dill, lemon wedges
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1015572 (may not work)