Every year, I
look forward to spring for many reasons.
One of which is our local spring salmon. This is one of my
favourite ways to cook spring salmon (serves two):
-
2
fillets of spring salmon with skin and ping bones removed.
-
1 TBS
of grainy mustard
-
1 TBS
of honey
-
1 TBS
of finely diced shallots or green onion
-
1 TBS
of chopped Italian parsley.
-
2 TBS
of fresh squeezed lemon (about ½ of lemon)
-
Salt
& pepper to taste.
-
5-6
TBS of olive oil.
Heat oven to 450
F. You will need a 8 to10 inch pan
that can go from the stove to oven (i.e. a pan with a metal handle).
Mix the mustard,
honey, shallots/green onion, parsley, and lemon and stir to make a sauce. Add salt and pepper to taste. Set aside. Use quality salt. I buy grey sea salt, dry it out on a tray,
and crush the salt in a mortar.
Salt and pepper the fillets both sides. Heat the skillet pan
to almost high. Add the oil. The oil should be smoking in the pan. Tilting the pan to slide the oil to the
bottom of pan and away from you. Add the pieces of salmon, fillet side down
(i.e. boned side down for presentation purposes only). Cook for about 2 minutes until the
fillets have a good brown crust. Flip the fillets and cook for about a minute.
Spoon the sauce over the top of the salmon. The dripping sauce over the fillets and onto the pan will
spatter. Transfer the pan
into the preheated oven. Cook for about 2-3 minutes.
Buttered jasmine rice, spring potatoes or rice pilaf is a great side dish.
All light reds
from cooler climate work well. Beaujolais from a balanced year, such as 2008 and 2010
works well. Auvergne Gamay grown on mountains, such as 'La Guillaume' or 'Les Pierre Noires' from Jean Maupertuis are also a superb match with the salmon. Cheverny Rouge, which is a
mixture of Pinot Noir and Gamay (in Burgundy , the equal version is ‘Passetoutgrain’) is ravishing.
For me though,
pure Gamay from Loire is a match made in
heaven with our salmon dishes. La Butte
(100% Gamay) from Le Clos du Tue-Boeuf from the family domain of Thierry andJean-Marie Puzelat is awesome with the salmon dish. La
Butte, like all Thierry and Jean-Marie Puzelat’s wines, has intentional
residual carbon dioxide – which occurs naturally during wine making
process. The carbon dioxide keeps the
wine ALIVE and vibrant. You can decant
it, if you prefer, and the ‘pearly’ taste of carbon dioxide will be gone in
about 10 minutes. Thierry Puzelat serves
his reds straight from the bottle with the ‘pearly’ feel intact and straight from his
cellar at 10-12 C deg. If you don’t have
a cellar, placing the bottle in the fridge for about 30- 40 minutes or 10
minutes in a Champagne
bucket with ice & water will do. The cool
temperature really brings out the freshness and perfume of the light reds.
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