The Flowers In The Sea recipe
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Timings & Yeildings
Prepration :
Cooking :
Total :
Yeildings: 1servings
Direction and Ingredients

280 g Fresh salmon fillet

280 g Fresh garoupa fillet

12 Romaine lettuce leaves

5 g Sea urchin roe *

8 Baby artichokes

1 1/3 c Fish stock

Salt, white pepper, -vinegar, lemon juice Flour

-----------------------------------SAUCE-----------------------------------

1 1/3 c Dry white wine

20 g Chopped shallots

1 c Fish stock

1 1/3 c Fresh cream

75 g Sea urchin roe (optional)

Salt, freshly-milled white -pepper, lemon juice

40 g Butter

20 g Lobster coral (roe) **

----------------------------------GARNISH----------------------------------

4 Whole sea urchins (optional)

Vinegar/lemon juice, salt, -oil

80 g Watercress

* (optional - lobster roe can be substituted, but it will change the overall flavour)

** or substitute a pinch of paprika for colouring purposes, although it will change over all flavour

This is another "not what it appears to be" dish. The main part looks kinda like a sea anemone. It's garnished with whole, boiled sea urchins++a nice touch. You should be able to find the sea urchin roe at a Japanese grocery. Remember the "shallots" called for are probably green onions.

Establishment: Hotel Riverside Plaza Tai Chung Kiu Road, Shatin, New Territories. Western Cuisine Practical Class Gold Award - Hot Fish Dish Chef: Chow Kwok-ting, Phil (Hotel Riverside Plaza)

To prepare: 1. Slice salmon and garoupa fillets into thin squares about 9 to 10 cms wide and 3 to 4 mms thick. Each ball needs two slices of each fish. (Do not attempt to make them all exactly the same width, as the subsequent moulding process is easier if the layers of fish diminish in size.) Season with salt and pepper. .

2. Blanch lettuce leaves by dipping in hot water, then refresh in

iced water. Cut into squares of similar diminishing dimensions as fish slices. Each ball needs four lettuce squares.

3. Pile up alternating layers of fish and lettuce, starting with a

bottom layer of salmon, then lettuce, garoupa, lettuce, salmon, lettuce, garoupa, and a final layer of lettuce. Place a dot of sea urchin or lobster roe (optional)

4. Lay each pile on a piece of cling wrap about 20 cms square.

Moulding upwards from the bottom layer, form each pile into a ball. Wrap it firmly, twisting a knot at top of cling wrap to hold moulded ball in shape.

To cook: 1. To make sauce, reduce white wine with chopped shallots to thickness of essence. Add fish stock and reduce again. Add fresh cream, and remainder of sea urchin or lobster roe (optional). Strain sauce, add salt and pepper and a few drops of lemon juice. Stir in butter and lobster coral (or paprika). Keep warm.

2. To cook artichokes, bring a pan of water to the boil. Add some

lemon juice drops, salt, a little plain flour and whole baby artichokes, and simmer for 25 to 30 minutes. Remove artichokes and discard green outer leaves. Carefully peel off purple-tinted inner leaves, trim them uniformly and set aside. Cut white artichoke bottoms so that they have flat bases.

3. (Optional) Boil sea urchins, adding a little vinegar or lemon

juice, oil and salt to pan. (Please note that the very prickly urchins must be handled with care! Although they are edible garnishes, special eating tongs are recommended!)

4. Heat fish stock. Simmer wrapped balls for about five minutes,

remove pan from heat and leave aside for 1 to 2 minutes. During simmering prepare the presentation plates as below.

To present: 1. Pour sauce onto plates (forming the "sea")

2. Place two artichoke bottoms on each plate , laying two layers of

trimmed artichoke leaves around each bottom.

3. Remove fish balls from stock and make three cross-wise inci-

sions on top of each. (Cling wrap will fall away, and cut "blossoms" reveal their layers and "pollen' of sea urchin roe.) Lifting it clear of its cling wrapping, place one fish ball on each artichoke bottom.

4. Add watercress and cooked sea urchin (or alternative garnish) to

each plate.

From "Champion Recipes of the 1986 Hong Kong Food Festival". Hong Kong Tourist Association, 1986.

Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; October 29 1992.

  
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