WILD Pouting Fish Fillet

“Pouting is way up there, quality-wise,” says Jamie Oliver. “It’s buttery, flaky, juicy, and a wonderful carrier of flavors. It’s from the same family as cod so makes a great alternative to its over-fished cousin. Use it in place of more traditional white fish in any of your favorite recipes. I’ve done whole fillets here, but you could easily cut them lengthways into chunky pieces for proper fish fingers.”

Due to their naturally short lifespan and early breeding age, pouting is seen as a relatively sustainable fish to eat

Each fillet might size between 50g and 120g.

Product Features: fillet

Size: around 500g

Storage:  Keep refrigerated at 0° to 4° and consume within 3 days after opening the sealed pack. Consume before the sell-by date.

Origin: France

French Name: Tacaud (Trisopterus luscious) 

Packing:  vacuum pack of 1KG

279.00 $

 

Time: 45 mins

Serve: 2

FOR THE SWEET POTATO CHIPS

2 medium sweet potatoes, scrubbed clean and cut lengthways into 8 wedges

½ teaspoon sweet smoked paprika

olive oil

 

FOR THE BASIL MAYO

4 sprigs of fresh basil

½ lemon, cut into wedges

1 heaped tablespoon of low-fat mayonnaise, made with free-range eggs

 

2 sprigs of fresh rosemary

1 tablespoon fat-free natural yoghurt

2 x 130 g pouting or whiting fillets, from sustainable sources, ask your fishmonger, skin on, scaled and pin-boned

2 heaped tablespoons of plain flour

1 free-range egg, beaten

50 g fresh breadcrumbs

1 clove garlic, crushed

½ lemon juice

 

  1. Preheat the oven to 200ºC/400ºF/gas 6. Toss the sweet potato wedges in a roasting tray with a pinch of sea salt and black pepper, the paprika and a lug of olive oil. Cook in the hot oven for 35 to 40 minutes, or until golden and cooked through.
  2. Meanwhile, put the pouting fillets on a board and sprinkle over a pinch of salt and pepper and the flour, making sure they’re well coated on both sides. Dunk the floured fillets in the beaten egg then transfer them to the breadcrumbs and push and turn them until well coated on all sides.
  3. Put a large frying pan on a medium heat. Add a good lug of olive oil along with the garlic and rosemary to flavour the oil. When the garlic starts to sizzle, it’s time to add the fish. Shake the fillets so any excess breadcrumbs fall off then add to the pan, skin-side down. If you’re cooking fish fingers, they’ll need 5 to 6 minutes; a whole fillet will take 7 to 8 minutes. Don’t be tempted to touch the fish, use your instincts and let it cook until golden on the underside before flipping it over and reducing it to a low heat while it finishes cooking.
  4. Meanwhile, chop off the tough ends of the basil stalks then pound the rest of it with a pinch of salt in a pestle and mortar until you’ve got a paste. Add the mayonnaise, yoghurt and lemon juice and muddle it all together.
  5. Serve the pouting with a portion of sweet potato chips, a good dollop of basil mayo and a wedge of lemon for squeezing over. Delicious with a crisp green salad or hot buttered peas.
Weight N/A