PICKLED FISH WITH ROE
The Pickled Fish with Roe recipe out of our category saltwater Fish! EatSmarter has over 80,000 healthy & delicious recipes online. Try them out!
Provided by EAT SMARTER
Time 20m
Yield 4
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Mix together the fish, apple, egg, dill, gherkins, vinegar and oil and season to taste with salt, ground black pepper, gherkin water and a pinch of sugar.
- Transfer to glasses and serve garnished with caviar, dill and onion.
HOW TO PICKLE FISH
How to Pickle Fish. Pickled fish is a popular food the world over, largely because pickling allows the meat to last longer than simple refrigeration or open-air storage. Pickling also gives fish a slightly salty and acidic bite, which can...
Provided by wikiHow
Categories Fish and Seafood
Number Of Ingredients 2
Steps:
- Cut your fish into chunks. While you can pickle full fish or large fillets, you won't get the same control over the process that you do when you cut up the fish. If your fish is freshly caught, clean and gut it first. Then, use a sharp, clean knife to cut your fish into large chunks before you start the brining process. The chunks should be about the size of a large bite of food. You want to be able to eat them, but you don't want them to be so small that they dissolve during the pickling process. For smaller fish like anchovies or herring, you may be able to pickle the whole filet without cutting it up.
- Use salt and water to make a weak brine. Your fish will go through a weak brine before it goes in the heavy, more flavorful brine. Make a weak brine by adding 1 cup of kosher salt or sea salt per every quart of water (about 200 grams per every liter of water), and bringing the solution to a boil. Let the salt dissolve before removing it from the heat. Then, allow the brine to cool. You will need enough brine to completely cover your fish.
- Cover your fish with the weak brine. Once the brine has cooled to room temperature, put your fish fillets or fish chunks in a ceramic or glass container. Pour in enough brine to completely cover the fish, but not so much that you cannot move the dish.
- Refrigerate the fish in brine for 8-24 hours. How long you choose to keep your fish in the weak brine will be a matter of preference. The longer you brine, the more of a pickled flavor you will get. This can work well for stronger fish like pike but may be too much for a more delicate fish like bass.
- Drain the brine from the container. Carefully drain out the brine from the dish into the sink or another container. At this point, you may or may not choose to rinse the fish. Rinsing helps get rid of some of the salty flavor from the brine. If you do rinse, pat the fish dry completely. If you don't rinse, you should still pat the fish to absorb any excess salt.
- Cover pike and strongly flavored fish with white vinegar for up to a day. More delicate fish including salmon and trout don't need to go into vinegar, but stronger fish often do. After you've removed the brine and patted dry your fish, cover it with 5% acidity distilled white vinegar. Put the fish back in the refrigerator and allow it to sit for at least overnight and up to a full day. Once your fish is ready for pickling, drain the vinegar, but don't rinse off the fish. Other fish that may benefit from a vinegar soak include mackerel, sardines, and anchovies.
PICKLED FISH
This recipe comes from my husbands aunt. We love to fish and some times I get tired of fried fish, so I tried this recipe I found in one of my many cook books. We love it, and its cheaper than the pickled fish in the stores.
Provided by michele frank
Categories Scandinavian
Time 35m
Yield 1 quart
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Put fish in gallon jar, Add pickling salt and 1 cup white vineger.
- Put into refigerator for five days.
- Shake every day.
- Salt will not dissolve.
- After five days, rinse with cold water, drain and blot dry.
- Mix white suger, wine, 1 cup white vinger and pickling spice in sauce pot, heat just to a boil.
- Take off stove and let cool.
- Add fish and onions to clean gallon jar, then add brine.
- Shake occasionally.
- Fish will be ready to eat in 2 days.
- But the longer it sets the better it is.
- If you want to double this recipe, double everything but the spices.
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