Limey Corny Salmon Bake
Preview
Serves
6Ingredients
6 sweetcorn cobs | |
1 tablespoon cumin seeds | |
1 tablespoon coriander seeds | |
1 teaspoon salt | |
1 teaspoon ground ginger | |
1 teaspoon ground turmeric | |
½ teaspoon ground black pepper | |
6 x 250g skinless salmon fillets | |
4 limes | |
3 tablespoons olive oil | |
large handful of coriander leaves | |
1 chilli, sliced (optional) |
This extract from Special Guest by Annabel Crabb & Wendy Sharpe shows how to host friends and family without stressing out.
Instructions
1. | First: chargrill your corn cobs. |
2. | I find that the easiest way to do this quickly is on a gas cooktop. |
3. | Put an old wire rack over a medium flame and crowd your cobs onto it, so they’re right in the flame. |
4. | Turn them as they brown and blister, ensuring all sides of them get a bit of the heat. |
5. | You can balance them directly on the hob but it’s messier, plus you get red-hot corn cobs rolling everywhere – good comedy potential, but annoying if you’re pushed for time. |
6. | Once all the cobs are done, set them aside to cool. |
7. | (If you don’t have a gas cooktop but you do have a barbecue, use that instead. |
8. | And if you have neither, just cook the cobs under a hot grill, turning regularly.) |
9. | Toast the cumin and coriander seeds in a dry frying pan until fragrant, stirring often so they don’t burn, then tip the lot into a large mortar and pestle, along with the salt. |
10. | Grind to a powder, then stir in the ground ginger, turmeric and black pepper. |
11. | Choose an ovenproof dish that will hold your salmon fillets snugly, obliging them to overlap each other a bit; overlap is key here. |
12. | Line the dish: no greasing or anything, you just want a big sheet of baking paper scrunched up then straightened out and laid over the dish. |
13. | Now, take half of your spice mix and rub it all over the salmon fillets. |
14. | Lay them – you guessed it – overlapping on top of the baking paper. |
15. | Back to the corn. |
16. | With a big sharp knife, cut the kernels from the cobs. |
17. | (I keep the cobs because they make an excellent addition to stock for Chinese soups, but you need not share this particular behavioural quirk.) |
18. | With luck, some of the kernels will come off in big sheets. |
19. | Tuck these between, under and on top of the salmon fillets. |
20. | Don’t feel all teary and inadequate if the kernels just crumble off, though; it’s no biggie. |
21. | Put the rest of the corn into a bowl for the salsa. |
22. | Zest one of the limes into the bowl, then juice that lime and one of its friends and add that too. |
23. | Stir in half of the olive oil and the rest of your spice mix. |
24. | If you’re prepping in advance, cover with plastic wrap and chill until needed. |
25. | Juice the other two limes and whisk with the rest of the olive oil. |
26. | Drizzle this over the salmon in the dish, which is now oven-ready: you can cover the dish with plastic wrap and consign it to the fridge, or cook it straightaway. |
27. | Either way, it needs about 20 minutes in a preheated 200°C (180°C fan) oven, or until the salmon is just starting to brown around the edges – be careful not to overcook it. |
28. | At the last minute, toss the coriander leaves through the salsa and add the chilli, if using. |
29. | Top the baked salmon with large dollops of salsa: you want a riotously colourful and loaded look, not just a sprinkle. |
30. | Serve straight from the dish at the table, with any remaining salsa on the side so people can help themselves. |
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