I have shared this with my kids, who thought it an unusual confession. Now for the world:
I find cooking sliced leeks in butter on the stovetop a fantastically pleasing experience. It's the combination of the bright and cheerful green/white colour with the gentle smell of onion that doesn't overpower the kitchen the way onions can. I can't think of any other vegetable which gives the same aesthetic pleasure in its combination of sight and smell.
I know - doing garlic (especially with some chilli flakes) in a pan with olive oil can be pretty intensely pleasing too, from an olfactory point of view. I even love the smell of virgin olive oil heating up by itself. But you don't get any substantial aesthetic pleasure from the colour. (Yes, I know, some olive oils have a nice colour - but it's not the same cheerful palate as leeks.)
Anyway, now that that's out of the way, I was very pleased with the result of more-or-less following this recipe last night:
Seared salmon with mashed potato and leeks
The ingredient list I modified a little, so I will write my version that worked well:
* Enough potato for a generous serving of mash for four
* One large leek (you want to get at least a cup when its sliced)
* Butter (and a bit of olive oil)
* Corn, fresh, sliced off the cob (I used one big cob's worth for 3 people last night - yes, I had left over potato - but I would say you probably want a cup and a bit for 4)
* small amount of garlic (minced out of a jar is ok)
* baby rocket (a couple of cups)
* skin on salmon pieces
The great thing about mashed potato is the way they reheat so well in the microwave. I did this yesterday - did the mash after lunch, went to a movie, came home and the rest of the cooking was very quick.
So: make your mashed potatoes the way you like, but while the potatoes are cooking, cook the sliced leeks in a couple of tablespoons of butter (perhaps more, because I use a substantial amount of butter in mashed potato anyway.) Mix the leeks into the mash and there you have it - mashed potato with a sweeter, more intense flavour than the blander variety. Just plain mash with salmon is a bit dull, I think.
Cook the salmon fillets with some butter and a little olive oil. Take them out, perhaps drain off some of the butter/oil, put in the corn kernels and garlic, with a little bit more butter if you want, and they soften with a few minutes. While waiting, mash on plate, salmon on top. Throw rocket in with the corn, just to wilt them (only takes a minute), add a bit of salt, and onto the salmon and mash.
I still served a lemon wedge with the salmon. I think its often a bit tricky finding the right side vegetables with pan fried salmon, as you want some moisture somewhere, and I can't be bothered doing a sauce. This worked well.
You can thank me later.
3 comments:
Old Scandinavian kenning (kenning = a poetic euphemism found in old Scandinavian poems) for leeks: ‘Onion of war’.
Why? I can't tell if that is a good reference to them, or bad.
Looks like a sword, I thought. Flattering as it is a valorous image.
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