The Denver Post

How to cook fish

- By Bill St. John, Special to The Denver Post

I was a chicken when it came to fish.

I could cook a terrific Thai green curry, or a mean vindaloo, or a yellow cloud of hollandais­e.

But when I used to cook seafood, I froze. The mussels vulcanized; the salmon was overdone. Cooked cod resembled a glacier: it calved sections of itself.

I knew that seafood and lake fish are, in fact, the simplest things to cook. But I always messed them up — just like dozens of other home cooks with whom, over the years, I’ve shared stories in the mysterious ways of fin and gill.

Then, a few years ago, I learned the great lesson of cooking fish: Don’t.

Don’t cook it, at least much. It’s best to cook fish hardly at all. Treat it, all of it, simply and at a minimum.

That admonition is about the heat, that’s all. About the seasonings or flavorings, you may be as lavish or as parsimonio­us as you wish. But back off on the fire.

Here are some quick fixes for fish of various sorts.

Shrimp: Place shell-on shrimp of any size, at room temperatur­e, in a flat, heatproof dish and pour over them a court bouillon that has been brought to the boil and flavored generously with anything aromatic (garlic, shallots, a mix of sweet and hot peppers, various herbs or spices).

Just pour the liquid over them. That will be the hottest that the shrimp will ever be. Leave the shrimp until the liquid cools to your liking and then peel.

Lobster: Steam or boil a one and a half pound lobster no more than seven minutes, despite that cookbooks say to cook lobsters that size for 10-12 minutes. Then immediatel­y plunge the lobster into an ice water bath and cool it down in there.

When you want to serve the lobster, cut it up and reheat it for three or four minutes, over high heat, in a sauté pan, with the meat still in the shell, flavored with splashes of olive oil and soy sauce, and any aromatics (as above, for the shrimp) that you choose. This preparatio­n makes for a more flavorful lobster than a traditiona­l water-only steam or boil.

Scallops: Most scallops that you see at market are called “wet” scallops, soaked in very cold water at sea after harvesting (and, most likely, preservati­ve solutions such as sodium benzoate or sodium tripolypho­sphate to keep them glossy and white). You might think that you are sautéing them in olive oil or the like but you are also steaming them in those liquids.

The best scallops to buy, if you can get them, are “dry” scallops. Sure, they have a much shorter shelf life and are more expensive, but you can get a crust on them in a way not possible with wet scallops. So, quickly crust them, flip them, crust again, and they’re done. Sixty to 90 seconds a side should do it, depending on the thickness of the scallops.

Flaky-fleshed fish: The rule for cooking most other fish was always “10 minutes per inch” over the heat, but, depending on the heat (stovetop, oven or grill), that can be way too long.

It’s best to learn to cook flaky fish by touch rather than by time or temperatur­e. Push down with your fingertip on a piece of fish as it cooks and gauge its resistance. That will tell you it’s done or not.

It’s a difficult rule to learn, but fish that is cooked to medium-rare — the preferred doneness, as far as chefs think — will feel like pressing the inside base of your thumb when your palm is nearly stretched out.

Our pal salmon provides additional help. When the white juices from the albumin begin to ooze out of the top, you know it’s ready.

It’s best to broil thin fish, such as flounder or a filet of trout. If you’re broiling a whole flat fish such as a snapper, cut deep angular slits in one side of the fish, in a tic-tac-toe pattern. Doing so allows the heat to penetrate into the fish more quickly and evenly.

Before broiling, dress the fish with olive oil, sea salt, pepper, citrus peel (orange or lemon) and thyme or rosemary.

Many chefs also “twostage” fish cookery. They cook only partially atop the stove in a sauté pan, and then finish cooking for three to four minutes in a hot (450 degree) oven. Doing so assures both a flavorful crust and an even temperatur­e throughout.

This recipe for white flaky fish is flavored with charmoula (sometimes spelled chermoula), a heady greens-andflavori­ngs mixture used in North Africa.

Moroccan Baked Fish with Charmoula

From “How to Pair Wine,” Bill St John and Chicago Tribune Staff (Agate Digital, 2013) Serves 4

Ingredient­s

1K pounds thick filets of snapper or cod

Salt

2-3 tablespoon­s squeezed orange juice, in reserve

FOR THE CHARMOULA

2 cloves garlic

1 teaspoon freshly grated ginger

O cup loosely packed flatleaf parsley

O cup loosely packed

cilantro leaves

3 tablespoon­s extra-virgin olive oil

2 tablespoon­s squeezed orange juice

1 teaspoon powdered cumin

1 teaspoon hot paprika powder

1 teaspoon grated lemon zest

K teaspoon coriander seed k teaspoon each: saffron, cinnamon, ground red pepper

Directions

Heat oven to 450 degrees. In a blender or small processor bowl, combine all the ingredient­s for the charmoula and blend into a paste. Season the fish filets with salt and rub in half the charmoula mixture. Place filets in a baking dish; bake until just cooked through, 10-13 minutes, depending on thickness and beginning temperatur­e of filets. (Press down on the top of the fish just before you believe it should be done. If it resists to pressure like the inside base of your thumb when your palm is nearly stretched out – it’s done.) Thin the remaining spice mixture with as much of the reserved orange juice to make a smooth sauce. Spoon over the fish.

 ?? Kirk McKoy, Los Angeles Times file photo ?? Charmoula sauce, made from garlic, olive oil and herbs, is a common North African fish and meat marinade.
Kirk McKoy, Los Angeles Times file photo Charmoula sauce, made from garlic, olive oil and herbs, is a common North African fish and meat marinade.
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