Braised Halibut With Asparagus, Baby Potatoes and Saffron

- Total Time
- 35 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½teaspoon saffron threads
- 2tablespoons lightly toasted almonds
- 2garlic cloves, green shoots removed, or 4 green garlic cloves
- 2anchovies, rinsed
- Salt and black pepper to taste
- 2tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 45- to 6-ounce halibut fillets
- 1pound baby potatoes, cut in ¾-inch pieces, or small potatoes, halved and sliced about ¾-inch thick
- ¾pound asparagus, trimmed and cut in 2-inch lengths
- 2tablespoons minced parsley
- 2tablespoons minced basil
Preparation
- Step 1
Crush saffron threads between your fingers and place in a small bowl or ramekin. Add 1 tablespoon warm water and set aside.
- Step 2
In a mortar and pestle, pound together almonds, garlic and anchovies along with a pinch of salt into a paste. Set aside.
- Step 3
In a heavy straight-sided skillet or wide saucepan, heat olive oil over medium-high heat. Season fish with salt and pepper. When oil is hot, sear fish for 1 minute on each side. Remove to a plate or platter.
- Step 4
Reduce heat to medium and add anchovy paste to pan. Cook, stirring and scraping bottom of pan, until garlic is fragrant, 30 seconds to a minute. Stir in 3 cups water and stir to deglaze bottom of pan. Add potatoes and a pinch of salt. (Don’t salt to taste now or broth will become too salty when reduced later.) Bring to a boil. Add saffron with soaking water, reduce heat, cover and simmer until potatoes are just tender, 10 to 15 minutes.
- Step 5
Carefully add seared halibut fillets and asparagus to pan. Tip in any liquid that has accumulated on the plate or platter, and bring back to a bare simmer. Cover and poach gently for 5 minutes, or until fish is opaque and asparagus is tender. With a slotted spoon or tongs, carefully remove fish fillets to 4 warm wide soup bowls. If necessary, simmer asparagus for another minute or 2. It should be tender but not too soft.
- Step 6
Divide potatoes and asparagus among the bowls. Turn up heat and reduce liquid in pan by half, stirring. Taste and adjust seasoning. Stir in parsley and basil and simmer 20 to 30 seconds. Spoon broth over fish and vegetables and serve.
Private Notes
Comments
Heat your stainless steel Al Clad pan until you can add a few drops of water that beads up and “dances” (not just a sizzle) around the pan and evaporates. Add the oil and your pan is now essentially non-stick. Your fish will sear much better giving you the famed Maillard reaction.
The mix of flavors is excellent, but the broth made as specified is weak. Most importantly, use a fish stock instead of water, and use 8 anchovies (or add Thai fish sauce to taste at the end). I made this with twice the almonds, 3 times the garlic, and dissolved twice the amount of saffron in rose water (not plain water). It was fantastic.
Delicious! If you can stand the price of halibut this is well worth making. Do yourself a favor and use a nonstick pan to sear the fish - I used my beloved All Clad and struggled mightily to get the fish turned over and out of the skillet without having it fall apart. As always with NYTimes recipes it takes longer than indicated - closer to an hour than 35 minutes if you're a regular home cook. The anchovies add flavor and you don't know they're there. Good enough to serve to company.
The broth as written is rather bland. I would agree with those that commented on using fish stock, etc. I would also not that it might be better to really sear the fish, at least on one side, so that it is really crispy.
Kinda missed the mark for me. In particular, I didn't think saffron added to the dish at all
Add kalmata olives and maybe capers at the end. Also add lemon
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