Fish With Citrus-Chile Sauce
Published July 31, 2022

- Total Time
- 40 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½teaspoon Timur (Timut) peppercorns (see Tip)
- ¼teaspoon white peppercorns, preferably fermented (see Tip)
- 1½tablespoons Moscatel vinegar (see Tip)
- 2teaspoons crushed Calabrian chiles (in oil)
- 1½teaspoons fresh marjoram leaves, finely chopped
- ½teaspoon orange or tangerine juice
- 1small garlic clove, minced
- 3tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- Salt
- 4sturdy white fish fillets or steaks (about 6 ounces each), such as halibut, red snapper, sea bass or swordfish
- Salt and pepper
- Olive oil
For the Sauce
For the Fish
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the sauce: Toast the Timur pepper in a dry skillet over medium heat. When the pods are fragrant but not yet darker brown, remove them from the heat and let cool. Using a spice grinder or a mortar and pestle, crush into a fine powder, along with the white peppercorns.
- Step 2
In a small bowl, whisk together the vinegar, chiles, marjoram, juice, garlic and the freshly ground Timur and white pepper. Let sit for 30 minutes for the flavors to meld, then gradually whisk in the olive oil. Add salt. Taste and add more of whichever seasonings you like, whisking as you go. Use immediately or refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 1 week.
- Step 3
Make the fish: Pat the fish dry and season on both sides with salt and pepper. If cooking on the stovetop, coat a skillet with oil and heat over medium-high. (The skillet should be large enough to hold all the fillets with space between them. If it isn’t, work in batches.) Carefully add the fish to the hot oil and pan-fry the fish until browned, about 3 minutes on each side. (Gently probe the fish with a fork; if it flakes, it’s done.) Remove from the heat and transfer to plates.
- Step 4
If grilling, heat a grill to medium-high. Generously brush or rub the fish with olive oil to coat. Place on the hot grill grates, skin side down if there’s skin and cover if using a gas grill. Cook until the fish releases easily from the grate, about 3 minutes. For thinner fillets, the flesh will be just opaque throughout and starting to gape and the fillets don’t need to be flipped. Simply transfer them to plates. For thick fillets or steaks, carefully flip the fish and cook until just opaque throughout, 2 to 3 minutes more, then transfer to plates. Spoon the sauce over the fish and serve.
- Timur pepper, also sold as Timut pepper, belongs to a family of spices (including Sichuan and Sansho pepper) that leave a tingly sensation on the tongue. It has a unique citrus flavor and is sold at some markets and also available online from Burlap & Barrel, as are fermented white peppercorns.
- If you don’t have Moscatel vinegar, substitute 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar, adjust the amount of orange or tangerine juice to 1 tablespoon, and add 1 teaspoon orange zest and ¼ teaspoon sugar.
Private Notes
Comments
To those of you complaining about unfamiliar ingredients: If NYT Cooking featured only what most of us have on hand, what new techniques would we ever have the opportunity to learn?
Thank you for this of article. It gives me vocabulary I need to find ingredients,there are so many flavors out there, its hard to taste everything, but with this you can imagine how delicious they are. Timur peppercorns. White fermented pepper. I appreciate this information so much.
Yeah, I don’t have the ingredients either. But if you read the article, you’ll realize that this sauce was improvised because the chef didn’t have on hand the ingredients he’d normally use. So, if you don’t have the ingredients, improvise! The article actually provides some suggestions for doing so at the end.
Delicious despite the many substitutions, apple cider vinegar, black and cubeb peppercorns l, harissa instead of the calibrian peppers. I put some of the sauce on while cooking. Looking forward to trying the fermented white peppercorns!
I made this last night with fresh snapper and it was fantastic! I made a side relish/dish of castelvetrano olives, sliced San Marzano tomatoes, some pickled purple onion and walnut oil..salt and pepper and some spices to go with it. It was a terrific addition and gave a nice balance to the dish. Will definitely make this again.
Haven’t made this yet, but if for no other reason than introducing me to Burlap & Barrel, it’s a winner! A great resource.
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