SMOKED TROUT MOUSSE
Make and share this Smoked Trout Mousse recipe from Food.com.
Provided by evelynathens
Categories Spreads
Time 10m
Yield 2 1/2 cups
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Combine everything but whipping cream in processor and chop finely using 5-6 on/off turns of blades.
- With machine running, slowly pour cream through feed tube and blend well.
- Taste and adjust seasoning with salt, pepper and lemon juice.
- Chill overnight.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 684.6, Fat 50.6, SaturatedFat 24.6, Cholesterol 264.7, Sodium 161.9, Carbohydrate 5.7, Fiber 0.7, Sugar 0.9, Protein 50.8
SMOKED TROUT MOUSSE
Steps:
- In a food processor, pulse the trout until just blended. Add the cream cheese and cream and pulse the trout until just smooth. Add the lemon juice, salt, pepper and chives. Set aside.
- Serve a dollop with each corn dill muffin and garnish as desired.
SMOKED TROUT AND AVOCADO MOUSSE IN ENDIVE
Use a pastry bag to pipe the silky avocado mousse into the endive leaves for a beautiful presentation.
Provided by Martha Stewart
Categories Food & Cooking Appetizers
Yield Makes 20
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Pulse avocado with lemon juice until smooth. Season with salt and pepper. Transfer mousse to a pastry bag fitted with a small round tip. Pipe mousse into endive and flake trout onto them. Garnish with scallion.
SMOKED SALMON AND TROUT MOUSSE TERRINE
Provided by Moira Hodgson
Categories appetizer
Time 1h30m
Yield 10 - 12 servings
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Line the inside of a 9-by-4-inch terrine with pieces of smoked salmon, allowing the ends to hang over the edges. Set aside six pieces or so of salmon. Refrigerate.
- In a food processor, puree the smoked trout, add the dissolved gelatin with its water. Work in the whipped cream, sherry and Cognac. Season to taste with salt and pepper, and add the horseradish.
- Pour the mixture into the terrine, covering the center with the strips of reserved salmon, and folding the overlapping pieces of salmon over the top. Leave for an hour or overnight in the refrigerator to set.
- Turn the mousse out onto a plate lined with lettuce leaves and decorate it with sprigs of tarragon. Serve with thin slices of brown bread and butter passed separately.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 136, UnsaturatedFat 3 grams, Carbohydrate 2 grams, Fat 8 grams, Fiber 0 grams, Protein 12 grams, SaturatedFat 4 grams, Sodium 226 milligrams, Sugar 1 gram, TransFat 0 grams
SMOKED TROUT MOUSSE
Provided by Barbara Kafka
Categories dips and spreads, appetizer
Time 1h
Yield 15 servings
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Crumble trout into a small saucepan. Add 1 1/2 cups cream and stir. Bring to a simmer and cook gently over medium-low heat 10 minutes.
- Pour mixture into a blender and puree. Pass through a fine sieve into a metal bowl. Stir in lemon juice, horseradish and salt.
- In a glass measure, place the water. Sprinkle gelatin on top. When absorbed, put glass measure in a saucepan of simmering water until gelatin dissolves. Stir this mixture into the trout mixture.
- Whip remaining 1 cup heavy cream until firm but not dry. Fold into trout mixture.
- Rinse another metal bowl or a mold with ice water. Scrape mousse into the bowl or mold. Chill 1 hour or, tightly covered, overnight.
- Unmold by dipping bowl or mold into very hot water and inverting onto a serving dish.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 162, UnsaturatedFat 5 grams, Carbohydrate 1 gram, Fat 16 grams, Fiber 0 grams, Protein 5 grams, SaturatedFat 9 grams, Sodium 93 milligrams, Sugar 1 gram, TransFat 0 grams
SMOKED TROUT MOUSSE
Steps:
- Remove skin and all bones from the trout. Break the fish into chunks.
- Place trout in the work bowl of a food processor along with the butter and lemon juice and process until it forms a fine, smooth puree. The trout can also be mashed by hand and the butter worked in with a fork, but this is more tedious.
- Add the sour cream and process briefly to blend.
- Season to taste with salt and pepper. Transfer to a crock or a bowl and serve with toast, bread or crackers or spread on triangles of toast or pumpernickel bread to form individual canapes and top each with a little caviar or parsely as garnish. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
SMOKED TROUT MOUSSE
Categories Milk/Cream Food Processor No-Cook Buffet Lemon Trout Chill Dill Gourmet
Yield Makes 8 small wedges
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Lightly oil a straight-sided 2-cup mold or soufflé dish.
- In a food processor purée trout with 1/4 cup cream, butter, lemon juice, and salt until smooth and transfer to a bowl. In a very small saucepan sprinkle gelatin over water and let soften 1 minute. Heat mixture over moderately low heat, stirring, just until gelatin is dissolved (do not let boil) and cool to room temperature. In a bowl with an electric mixer beat remaining 1/2 cup cream until it just holds stiff peaks and fold into trout purée with gelatin mixture and salt to taste until combined well.
- Spoon half of mousse into mold or soufflé dish and smooth top. Spoon roe evenly over mousse (roe will not cover mousse completely) and sprinkle evenly with dill. Spoon remaining mousse over dill, spreading mousse evenly (being careful not to disturb roe and dill), and gently smooth surface. Chill mousse, covered, at least 12 hours and up to 2 days.
- To unmold mousse, run a thin knife around edge of mold or soufflé dish and dip bottom into a bowl of hot water 5 seconds. Invert mousse onto a plate and cut into 8 wedges (reserve 2 wedges for another use). Put sesame seeds in a shallow bowl and carefully dip outside edge of each wedge in seeds to coat.
SMOKED TROUT AND SCALLION MOUSSE
Steps:
- In the work bowl of a food processor fitted with a metal blade, combine the trout fillets, cream cheese, red onion, Worcestershire sauce, and lemon juice. Process for about 1 minute to incorporate all the ingredients. Process for another minute, or until smooth.
- Fold in the scallion, parsley, salt, and pepper.
- Place the mousse in a ramekin, cover with plastic wrap and chill for at least an hour or for up to a week ahead of time.
- Spoon the mousse into a 2-cup dish and serve it with your choice of crackers or with rye bread. For a more decorative presentation, spoon the mousse into a bowl, packing it in tightly, and then unmold it onto a plate. Or make tea sandwiches by spooning a layer of mousse onto thin slices of bread and topping it with horseradish or horseradish cream. Cut each slice of bread into quarters.
- A Word About Pickled Herring
- The practice of pickling herring has been around for centuries. Herring in wine is the typical Jewish preparation. The boneless fillets are first cured in salt to remove the moisture. Then they are rinsed and cured again in a combination of vinegar, wine, sugar, salt, and onions. They keep for months. Herring in cream sauce is basically herring in wine with sour cream added at the end. Other preparations, such as herring in mustard, curry, or dill, are all variations on herring in cream sauce. Matjes herring is a more Scandinavian approach. The herrings are cured in salt, rinsed, then cured again in vinegar, sugar, salt, and spices such as cloves, cinnamon, and a little nutmeg.
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