Hello everybody, it’s Jim, welcome to my recipe site. Today, we’re going to prepare a special dish, foolproof salt-grilled pacific saury in a frying pan. One of my favorites. For mine, I will make it a bit unique. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
Foolproof Salt-Grilled Pacific Saury in a Frying Pan is one of the most popular of current trending foods in the world. It is simple, it is quick, it tastes yummy. It’s enjoyed by millions daily. Foolproof Salt-Grilled Pacific Saury in a Frying Pan is something that I’ve loved my whole life. They’re fine and they look wonderful.
Sanma or Pacific Saury is one of the most well-known seasonal fish representing autumn in Japanese cuisine. It's usually salted and grilled whole and served It's usually salted and grilled whole even with intestines intact, and served with grated daikon and soy sauce to intensify the flavor of the fish. Methods for Pre-Cutting Salt-Grilled Pacific Saury.
To begin with this particular recipe, we have to first prepare a few ingredients. You can cook foolproof salt-grilled pacific saury in a frying pan using 7 ingredients and 12 steps. Here is how you can achieve it.
The ingredients needed to make Foolproof Salt-Grilled Pacific Saury in a Frying Pan:
- Make ready 2 Pacific saury (sanma)
- Get 1 Salt
- Make ready 1 Sudachi or kabosu (citrus)
- Take 1 Grated daikon radish
- Make ready 1 Ponzu sauce
- Get 1 sheet Kitchen parchment paper
- Get 1 dash Vegetable oil
Sanma Shioyaki (Salt-Grilled Pacific Saury) さんま塩焼き • Just One Cookbook. Japanese sanma shioyaki recipe, easy Japanese grilled fish recipe with grated radish dipping sauce for the fall. Great recipe for Cooked in a Frying Pan! Photo about Salt grilled pacific saury Sanma Shioyaki on black plate, in Japanese cuisine on white background.
Steps to make Foolproof Salt-Grilled Pacific Saury in a Frying Pan:
- Put a thick layer of newspaper on a cutting board. Place the Pacific saury with the head facing to the left. Cut the fish in half diagonally with a left-facing cut, aiming towards the fin closest to the head.
- Pull the guts out from the cut, and wash off any blood or slime from the fish under running water. (Your hands may get smelly, so use disposable gloves for this task.)
- Wipe off any moisture well with paper towels. Sprinkle on about 2 pinches of salt per fish from about a 30 cm height, covering both sides of the fish evenly.
- Line a frying pan with kitchen parchment paper, and oil it lightly with an oil-impregnated paper towel.
- Start cooking over hight heat with the side that will face up when you serve them facing down in the pan. When they start to make a sizzling sound, lower the heat to low-medium, and cook without covering for 7 to 8 minutes.
- Lift the fish up a bit. When the bottom side is golden brown, turn the fish over and keep cooking over the same level of heat for and additional 7 to 8 minutes.
- Arrange the Pacific saury on a plate with the side that was facing down in the pan first facing up (and with the head to the left). Grate and drain off some daikon radish and form into a neat mound. Serve this on the side of the fish with a sudachi (small citrus fruit).
- Tip: Choose fresh Pacific saury. They should have clear eyes, shiny blueish skins, and sharply pointed tails. They should also be nice and firm on the belly side.
- Tip: In Step 2, you can use disposable chopsticks and rotate them inside the cylindrical fish body to remove the guts easily. Put the guts in a plastic bag to dispose of them.
- Tip: 1 pinch of salt is the amount you can hold using 3 fingers. By sprinkling the fish with salt from a height, you can cover it evenly.
- Tip: In Step 5, if you try to turn the fish over while it's still raw the skin may come off, so once you hear the pan starting to sizzle hold back and don't move the fish for at least 6 minutes.
- You can cook salmon fillets or smelt in this too. The roe in smelts may burst and splatter so cover with a lid when you're cooking them. With salmon, you can cover the pan or not - it's up to you.
Salt-grilled saury is also served in Korea, where it is known as kkongchi gui (꽁치구이). The fish can also be pan-fried or canned kabayaki. Gwamegi is a Korean dish of half-dried Pacific saury made during winter. It is mostly eaten in the region of North Gyeongsang Province in places such as Pohang. Suchen Sie nach Grilled Pacific Saury Fish Salt-Stockbildern in HD und Millionen weiteren lizenzfreien Stockfotos, Illustrationen und Vektorgrafiken in der Shutterstock-Kollektion.
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