A good dish for company as it is prepared beforehand.
“Escabeche” —explained
Ingredients
4 fresh medium trout–gutted and cleaned
8 tablespoons olive oil
4 tablespoons flour–I use chickpea (avoiding processed white flour)
for the marinade:
The peel of an orange–chopped
Half a pint/250ml white wine
Juice of 2 oranges
Juice of one lemon
Half a medium onion–chopped small
2 tablespoons of parsley–chopped
Salt and pepper
Wash and thoroughly dry the trout.
Spread the chick pea flour on a large plate and turn the trout in it to coat well. Tap the excess flour off the fish.
Heat the oil in a large frying pan and fry the trout for about 5 minutes on one side and a minute less on the second side. Then lift it carefully out of the pan and into the marinading bowl.
Cut through the skin in two places on each side, without damaging the flesh.
To assemble the marinade:
In the same oil in which you fried the fish, sauté the onion until it colours.
Add the wine and chopped orange peel; let this boil for a few seconds.
Add the two juices, the salt and pepper and the parsley. Let this simmer for a few seconds before carefully pouring the contents of the pan over the trout.
The trout should bathe in the sauce overnight if possible, or at least for a few hours–to let the flavours mingle and inform.
Bring it back to room temperature if it’s been in the fridge and gingerly remove the skin on both sides–preserving the wholeness of the fish with its head and tail–for the look.
what would you have with this lovely dish – have similar weather in London – think I might give it a go!
Probably a simple salad. we had broccoli last night–wasn’t quite right.
I have made this with raw fish which is also excellent. Following through your references I find that I am not to confuse escabeche (cooked) with Ceviche (raw), and, continuing through the references, that one proposed origin of the word ceviche is escabeche. So maybe I can continue to make escabeche with raw fish….
Well, Chris–I’ve always understood ‘ceviche’ to be where the fish is ‘cooked’ by immersion in citrus juice.
To ‘escabech’–you fry the floured fish first briefly, then pour over a heated marinade.
They taste differently but both are delicious.
I’l try a ceviche sometime soon.