Best Sake And Miso Marinated Salmon With Coconut Rice And Broccolini Recipes

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MISO-MARINATED SALMON



Miso-Marinated Salmon image

This lightly miso-marinated salmon is served with a bright green spinach sauce underneath, then broiled or grilled. Learn how to make it for your next barbecue.

Provided by Hiroko Shimbo

Yield Serves 4

Number Of Ingredients 16

2 Tbsp. sake
3½ ounces (about 5 Tbsp.) Saikyo miso (sweet white miso)
1 Tbsp. sugar
1 large egg yolk
About ⅛ tsp. usukuchi shoyu (light-colored soy sauce), preferably, or regular shoyu
1¼ pounds fresh salmon or cod fillets, skinned or not, cut into 4 pieces
5 tsp. salt
8 ounces Saikyo miso (sweet white miso)
¼ cup sake
¼ cup mirin
¼ cup dry white wine
¼ cup rice vinegar
1 Tbsp. minced shallot
3½ ounces spinach leaves, 4 medium leaves reserved
Vegetable oil, for frying
6 to 8 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil, to taste

Steps:

  • First, make the tama-miso sauce. In a small cup, mix the sake with 2 tablespoons water. In a suribachi or other mortar, grind the miso, sugar, and egg yolk to a smooth paste. Add the rice wine and water mixture little by little, grinding all the time. Season to taste with shoyu. Have at hand a bowl half-filled with cold water and ice cubes. Transfer the sauce to the top of a double-boiler, and cook the sauce over simmering water, stirring constantly and thoroughly so you do not scramble the egg, until the sauce becomes thicker, about 6 to 8 minutes. Set the bowl of sauce in the bowl of cold water and ice cubes to cool. Tama-miso may be stored in the refrigerator, covered, for three days. Heat the sauce through before using it.
  • Salt the fish on both sides, and rest it on a steel rack set over the pan, for 1 hour in the refrigerator.
  • In a medium bowl, soften the miso by stirring in the sake and mirin. Spread one-third of the miso mixture in the bottom of a large pan in which the fish can fit without overlapping. Lay a tightly woven cotton cloth or two layers of cheesecloth over the miso in the pan. Wipe the salted salmon with a paper towel to remove the salt and the liquid exuded from the fish. Place all the salmon pieces on the cloth in the pan, and cover them with another tightly woven cotton cloth or two layers of cheese cloth. Spread the remaining miso mixture over the cloth, covering the surface completely. Wrap the entire pan with plastic wrap, and refrigerate it for 5 hours.
  • In a small saucepan, combine the dry white wine, komezu, and shallot. Bring the mixture to a boil over medium heat. Reduce the heat to very low, and cook the mixture until it is reduced to 1 tablespoon syrup.
  • In a large pot of boiling water, parboil the spinach, excluding the 4 leaves, 1 to 2 minutes. Cool the spinach in ice water, and drain the spinach well. In a food processor, purée the spinach. In a skillet, heat 1 inch oil over medium heat to 320°F. One at a time, add the 4 reserved spinach leaves to the oil, and cook them until they are bright green and translucent, 10 to 15 seconds. Transfer the spinach to paper towels to drain.
  • Lift the top cloth (or cloths) from the salmon, and remove the salmon from the marinade. Discard the marinade, or reserve it to use as a fish marinade one more time within 2 weeks, after heating it through and adding more miso and sake, or for making miso soup. If there is any miso residue on the fish, gently wipe it away with a paper towel. At this point you can refrigerate the fish, in a well-sealed plastic bag, for up to 3 days, or freeze it for a longer period.
  • Heat a broiler or grill, and the broiler pan or grill rack. With a pastry brush, lightly grease the pan or rack. Transfer the salmon to the pan or rack, and cook the salmon, turning once, until both sides are light golden. A 1-inch-thick salmon steak needs about 8 minutes' total cooking. Marinated fish burns easily, so you may need to cover the fish with aluminum foil as it cooks.
  • In a small saucepan, combine 2 Tbsp tama-miso sauce with the reduced vinegar-wine syrup. Place the saucepan over low heat, and cook until the mixture is heated through. Transfer the mixture to a medium bowl, and add the spinach purée. Little by little, whisk in the olive oil. Serve the salmon with the spinach sauce underneath and garnished with the fried spinach leaves.

MISO SALMON WITH SAKE BUTTER



Miso Salmon with Sake Butter image

After having Miso Salmon with Sake Butter at a favorite restaurant I immediately became obsessed with recreating this amazing dish at home. This is it! Serve it over sticky white rice with a side salad.

Provided by Everettrj

Categories     World Cuisine Recipes     Asian

Time 1h15m

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 19

2 cups water
1 cup short-grain white rice
1 cup snow peas
cooking spray
4 (6 ounce) 1-inch thick salmon fillets
¼ cup brown sugar, packed
2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce
2 tablespoons hot water
2 tablespoons miso (soybean paste)
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
2 tablespoons peeled, matchstick-cut fresh ginger
1 tablespoon minced shallots
½ cup sake (Japanese rice wine, such as Momokawa®)
1 tablespoon heavy whipping cream
½ cup cold unsalted butter, cubed
1 tablespoon sake (Japanese rice wine, such as Momokawa®)
½ teaspoon fresh lime juice
kosher salt to taste
1 tablespoon chopped fresh chives

Steps:

  • Bring water and rice to a boil in a saucepan. Reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer until most of the water has been absorbed, about 20 minutes. Place snow peas on top of the rice and steam, covered, until crisp-tender, about 5 minutes. Transfer snow peas to a bowl to stop cooking.
  • Set oven rack about 6 inches from the heat source and preheat the oven's broiler.
  • Line a baking dish with aluminum foil and coat with cooking spray. Arrange salmon fillets in the dish.
  • Whisk brown sugar, soy sauce, water, and miso together in a small bowl. Spoon over salmon.
  • Broil salmon in the preheated oven, basting it frequently with the topping mixture, until it is golden brown and flakes easily with a fork, 10 to 15 minutes.
  • Melt 1 tablespoon butter in a small saucepan over medium-high heat. Add ginger and shallots; cook and stir until shallots are translucent, 2 to 3 minutes. Add 1/2 cup sake; bring to a boil and cook until reduced by 2/3, about 3 minutes. Add heavy cream; bring to a boil and cook until sauce is reduced by half, about 2 minutes.
  • Whisk in cubes of butter one at a time until incorporated and sauce is thick and creamy. Remove from heat. Whisk in remaining 1 tablespoon sake and lime juice. Season with salt.
  • Spoon some sake sauce onto 4 serving plates. Place rice in the middle of each and top with a piece of salmon. Arrange snow peas around each plate. Garnish with chives.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 820.2 calories, Carbohydrate 60 g, Cholesterol 156.3 mg, Fat 44.3 g, Fiber 2.4 g, Protein 34.7 g, SaturatedFat 20.7 g, Sodium 783.9 mg, Sugar 16.7 g

SAKE SALMON AND RICE



Sake Salmon and Rice image

Provided by Nigella Lawson : Food Network

Categories     main-dish

Time 1h

Yield 2 servings

Number Of Ingredients 14

1 teaspoon English mustard, or wasabi paste*
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 tablespoon garlic or chili oil
1 tablespoon sake
2 salmon fillets
1 cup basmati rice
2 cardamom pods
1/4 cup sake
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon fish sauce or brown rice vinegar
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon English mustard, or wasabi paste
1 to 2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro, to garnish

Steps:

  • In a freezer bag, combine the mustard or wasabi paste, Worcestershire sauce, soy, oil, and sake and add the salmon fillets. Leave to marinate for about 20 minutes.
  • Follow packet instructions for the rice, or rice-cooker handbook or just put rice in a pan, bruise cardamom pods and chuck them in too, and put double the volume of water as you have rice. Bring to the boil, then turn down to the lowest you possibly can, clamp on a lid and leave until the rice has absorbed the water and is cooked, about 15 minutes.
  • Heat a smooth griddle or nonstick skillet, and cook the salmon fillets for 1 1/2 minutes on 1 side then a minute on the other side. Remove the salmon, double wrapping each fillet in foil parcels and let them rest for 10 minutes on a wooden board or a pile of newspapers.
  • Bring the sake to a boil in a tiny little saucepan, like one you might melt butter in, to let the alcohol taste evaporate. Take the pan off the heat and add the other sauce ingredients.
  • Unwrap the salmon fillets, removing them to a wooden board for carving as you do so.
  • Arrange some freshly boiled rice on 2 plates, and slice the salmon fillets into thin slices. Lay the carved salmon on top of the rice and spoon over the sauce, letting it gloss the fish and drip here and there over the rice. Scatter the cilantro on top.

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