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Sea bass with tomatillo cream and a hominy-black bean accompaniment
First, a word about the sea bass used in this recipe. I purchased it at Coastal Seafoods in St Paul, and I?m willing to assume that they wouldn?t sell a fish that is on the Monterey Bay Aquarium?s Seafood Watch endangered list. (http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/SeafoodWatch/web/sfw_factsheet.aspx?gid=6) In fact, there is apparently a lack of consensus on whether this fish - actually the Patagonian toothfish; ?sea bass? is a marketing name - is actually overfished and endangered. Google ?Sea bass endangered? to see the controversy. So there were three possibilities as far as my using it for this recipe: 1) This is another type of ?sea bass?, of which there are several; 2) It is the Patagonian toothfish, but Coastal has satisfied itself that it isn?t endangered; or 3) It is the Patagonian toothfish, it?s endangered, and they?re selling it anyway. As I wrote above, I think number 3 is highly unlikely. Other firm white-fleshed fish can certainly be used instead, though, such as halibut or swordfish. Red chile sauce: Dried guajillo and/or pasilla chiles, 6 Fresh red jalapenos, 3 - 5 garlic, 2 cloves shallot, 1 dried chipotle chile powder, 2 tsp (depending on heat tolerance) sweet paprika, 1 Tbs salt and pepper Tomatillo cream: Fresh tomatillos, 8 or so scallions, 5 or 6 cilantro, 1/2 cup, including stems sugar, 1 Tbs salt and pepper Heavy cream, 1 c. Cornstarch, 2 tsp Hominy-black beans accompaniment: Hominy, either white or yellow, one 16 oz can, drained and rinsed Black beans, 16 oz can, drained and rinsed Epazote, 1 tsp dried or 1 Tbs fresh Olive oil Salt and pepper The fish: Sea bass, 1 pound, skin removed Ground cumin Ground coriander Salt and pepper Olive oil For the red chile sauce: 1. Rehydrate the dried chilies and remove the stems, veins, and seeds. 2. Place the rehydrated chilies and the remaining ingredients in a food processor and process until pureed. 3. Reheat when the entire dish is finished. For the tomatillo cream: 1. Remove the papery skins from the tomatillos, rinse, and halve. 2. Slice the scallions - both green and white parts. 3. Roughly chop the cilantro. 4. Place the above, including sugar and salt and pepper, in a pan of boiling water and boil for five minutes. Retain a half cup or so of the water. 5. Put everything in a food processor and puree. 6. Return to the pan, add most of the heavy cream, retaining a couple of tablespoons. 7. Mix those two tablespoons with the two teaspoons of cornstarch and pour into the tomatillo mixture. If it becomes too thick, add some of that water mentioned in #4 above. For the hominy and black beans. 1. Drain and rinse the cans of hominy and black beans, and place in a pan with a tablespoon or more of olive oil and the epazote. Heat. Add salt and pepper. For the fish: 1. Heat the oven to 425 degrees. 2. Sprinkle a fair amount of ground cumin and coriander on both sides of the fish. Salt and pepper both sides. 3. Heat an ovenproof pan (or griddle pan if you want the crossmarks) over high heat, put some olive in it, and quickly brown both sides of the fish. 4. Place in the oven to finish cooking - roughly for five to ten minutes, depending on the thickness of the fish. Place the fish in the middle of the plates with the red chile sauce atop. For a more decorative touch, put the sauce in one of those plastic squirt bottles used for mustard and ketchup and paint a late Picasso-type design . . . or artist of your choosing. Rauschenberg would be nice. Or Mondrian, if you prefer straighter lines. Place the hominy and beans on one side and the tomatillo cream on the other. related searches : Sea
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