Oven-Poached Pacific Sole With Lemon Caper Sauce

- Total Time
- 40 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- 1½pounds Pacific sole or flounder fillets
- Salt and freshly ground pepper
- 1tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
- 3tablespoons finely chopped shallot
- 1cup dry white wine (you can also use rosé; the sauce will have a pink hue)
- 1plump garlic clove, minced or puréed (more to taste)
- 2tablespoons capers, rinsed and coarsely chopped
- ¼cup fresh lemon juice
- 3tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 2 to 4tablespoons finely chopped parsley
For the Sauce
Preparation
- Step 1
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Oil or butter one or two baking dishes large enough to accommodate the fish fillets in one layer. Lay the fish in the dish(es) and season with salt and pepper.
- Step 2
Heat the olive oil over medium heat in a small or medium skillet and add the shallot. Cook, stirring, until tender and translucent, about 3 minutes. Add the wine to the pan, bring to a boil, and pour the wine and shallots over the fish. Return the skillet to the stove (make sure the heat is off) for later use. Cover the baking dish with foil and place in the oven. Bake 8 to 10 minutes, or 5 minutes for each ½ inch of thickness, until the fish is opaque and pulls apart easily with a fork.
- Step 3
While the fish is in the oven, whisk together the garlic, capers, lemon juice and olive oil. You can also mash the garlic in a mortar and pestle and work in the capers, lemon juice and olive oil, though I prefer the capers chopped, even some intact, and not puréed.
- Step 4
When the fish is done remove it from the oven and carefully transfer to a platter or plates. Cover and keep warm. Pour the liquid in the baking dish into the skillet and turn the heat on high. Reduce, stirring often, to about ¼ cup – it should be thick – and stir in the garlic and caper mixture and the parsley. Whisk together, taste and adjust seasoning, pour over the fish and serve.
- Advance preparation: This is all pretty last minute, but you can prep the sauce before you begin cooking the fish.
Private Notes
Comments
The sauce is fantastic, but I think it can all be made on the stovetop and work just as well. Less fuss and mess.
Don't limit your horizons to the sole family. This works just as well with stripped bass, trout, and light flavored fish like haddock and cod. Shucks it's great with chicken cutlets too...
really wait and reduce the sauce at the end -- clings to the fish much better.
parsley -- take it or leave it. frankly think it's a distraction.
I used sole as well. Excellent.
Consider having it on a bed of red quinoa and leafy greens (spinach, kale, beet greens).
Red, green and white = pretty presentation
Since I hate capers; I used lemon-stuffed olives and it turned out great.
Thank you for the vermouth substitution suggestion, worked well. @Martin in North-west London
From zero preparation after a day gardening, brought this all together in 65 minutes. Being reluctant to open a bottle of white for the sauce, I substituted Extra Dry White Vermouth but otherwise followed Martha Rose's recipe. Used Lemon Sole and served with steamed Tender Stem Broccoli and Air-fried Parmentier Potatoes. The sauce is delicious.
Advertisement