HOW TO COOK SUNCHOKES RECIPES

facebook share image    twitter share image    pinterest share image    E-Mail share image

JERUSALEM ARTICHOKES | VEGETABLES RECIPES | JAMIE OLIVER ...



Jerusalem Artichokes | Vegetables Recipes | Jamie Oliver ... image

I love these crispy pan-fried Jerusalem artichokes with meat and fish or even in a warm salad

Total Time 40 minutes

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 7

600 g Jerusalem artichokes
olive oil
a few bay leaves
2 cloves garlic
1 splash white wine vinegar
salt
pepper

Steps:

    1. Jerusalem artichokes are sweet and almost garlicky and mushroomy and gorgeous. Although called artichokes they’re actually tubers – like rough and ready potatoes. You can scrub and roast them whole like mini jacket potatoes and split them open, drizzled with a little chilli oil. You can even use them in a salad with smoky bacon. A Jerusalem artichoke’s best friends are sage, thyme, butter, bacon, bay, cream, breadcrumbs, cheese and anything smoked.
    2. To serve 4, you will need 600g/1lb 6oz of Jerusalem artichokes. Peel them, then cut them into chunks. Place them in an oiled frying pan and fry on a medium heat until golden on both sides, then add a few bay leaves, 2 cloves of garlic, finely sliced, a splash of white wine vinegar, some salt and pepper, and place a lid on top. After about 20 to 25 minutes they will have softened up nicely and you can remove the lid and the bay leaves. Continue cooking for a couple of minutes to crisp the artichoke slices up one last time, then serve straight away. Personally, I think they go well with both meat and fish and are particularly good in a plate of antipasti, or in soups or warm salads.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 189 calories, FatContent 18.1 g fat, SaturatedFatContent 2.8 g saturated fat, ProteinContent 5.2 g protein, CarbohydrateContent 1 g carbohydrate, SugarContent 0.6 g sugar, SodiumContent 2.87 g salt, FiberContent 13.6 g fibre

HOW TO COOK SALMON - NYT COOKING



How to Cook Salmon - NYT Cooking image

Salmon is versatile and delicious. Florence Fabricant shows you how to cook it perfectly every time.

Provided by Florence Fabricant

Steps:

  • Buy the largest spatula you can find, one that can lift and turn a substantial portion of a fillet and transfer the fish to a platter. Better yet, buy a fish spatula, which is designed just for this purpose.A cast iron pan is excellent for searing fillets and then placing them in the oven. A reliable nonstick pan is also useful; look for one that can go into a hot oven. A sheet pan, reinforced so it won’t warp, is helpful for roasting and broiling.A pair of small needle-nose pliers from a hardware store does the best job of yanking out pinbones. Sturdy tweezers can be used but are less effective.Have parchment paper or aluminum foil on hand. Use them to enclose fillets for baking (fish en papillote), and for lining sheet pans, grill pans and roasting pans, which makes cleanup easier.
  • With salmon, one size does not fit all. There are a few basic categories of cuts, each with its own treatment and purpose. Small fillets and steaks are great for fast weeknight meals, while a whole side of salmon is an easy and elegant main course for a dinner party.Salmon fillets are the most commonly used cut of the fish, and for good reason: removing the pin bones is simple, and the cut lends itself to all methods of cooking. A fillet can be a small section of a boned side, intended to serve one or two people, or it or an entire boned side to serve a crowd. With or without skin? That depends on how you expect to cook the fish. Certain methods, like pan-frying fillets, are designed to give you crispy skin, and that skin is delicious. For poaching fish, however, the skin can be removed before cooking and discarded.For filleted, skinless fish, about six ounces per person is an average portion. With skin, add another ounce.These crosscut sections are best for grilling, broiling or pan-searing, though they can also be baked in a sauce. When buying more than one steak, be sure they are of uniform thickness so they cook at the same rate. Thicker steaks will be easier to cook so they acquire an attractive burnish and remain moist and succulent, roughly 10 to 12 ounces per steak. Consider serving half a large steak per person, divided in the kitchen after cooking and plated without the skin and bones. A side of salmon is the piece from which smaller fillets are cut, and it’s a great choice for when you want to serve a large group of people. A side can be grilled, roasted or broiled, or even poached if you own the right equipment. If you’re looking to cook a whole salmon, try two sides instead.
  • There are significant differences between farmed and wild salmon. Wild salmon comes from Pacific waters, and has a silky texture and a brilliant vermilion hue. It has a superior taste, with fewer calories and less fat than farmed salmon. It is also expensive, and there is less of it in the market. Farmed salmon is much more plentiful, and cheaper. It comes from Atlantic salmon stock, and bears the color of the feed it is given, most often the light pink flesh we associate with “salmon.” There are significant environmental concerns surrounding the farming of salmon. The wild salmon sold in the United States come from the Pacific. (Salmon has all but disappeared in the wild in the Atlantic, and the pockets that exist are reserved for sport fishing.) The season for Pacific salmon lasts from May to September; if you see it outside of those months, it has been frozen, though it will still be delicious. Wild salmon is usually more expensive and less readily available than farmed, but if you can get it, do it; it will elevate your meal. The most prized is Chinook or king salmon, which is the largest and most succulent of the species. Sockeye salmon, with its deep vermilion red flesh and firm texture, has acquired a following, especially when it’s from the Copper River in Alaska. Coho or silver salmon is a milder-tasting salmon and is generally wild, though there is some farm-raised Coho salmon. Steelhead trout is is a fish in the Pacific salmon genus. It has meaty pink flesh and comes in small sizes, which like two to three pounds that makes it convenient to cook whole. Tasmanian sea trout or ocean trout is another fish with salmon-colored flesh that’s closely related. May – SeptemberKingMay – AugustSockeyeEarly May – JuneCopper River SockeyeJune – SeptemberCohoJuly – SeptemberPinkReadily available all year round, farmed salmon generally has a rich, mild flavor, but lacks the salinity of wild salmon. It is also more affordably priced. Much of the farmed salmon in the United States is Atlantic salmon, though there are now some operations in the Pacific. (Some high-quality king salmon, branded Ora, is farmed in New Zealand.) Some of the farmed fish is labeled organic, but that term, when it comes to creatures swimming in the sea, is controversial. Arctic char, which is also in the salmonidae family, is usually farm-raised in the most northern reaches of the Atlantic. The fish has deep orange-pink flesh and a texture that is more delicate than that of regular farmed salmon. And because Arctic char is small, about 3 pounds, it is also an appropriate choice for cooking whole. Genetically modified salmon, which has a growth hormone gene from king salmon so it will grow two to four times faster, has been approved for sale in the United States. It will be at least a couple of years before it reaches the market, however.
  • Salmon fillets and sides have pinbones, the inch-long, flexible bones that stick up vertically in a row down the center of the fillet. Removing them is an easy maneuver; you don’t have to do this, but it makes for a prettier piece of fish and easier eating. A pair of pliers and a simple technique will get you smooth, boneless salmon. Here’s how.Lay your salmon fillet flat on a board or on a sheet of foil on your counter, skin side down (even if there is no skin). Run your hand across the surface of the fish. You will feel a ridge of the tiny bones sticking up.Starting at the thickest end of the fillet, use needle-nose pliers to grab the tip of the bone and firmly yank it out. There may be as many as 20 of these bones in a whole fillet.
  • Cooking salmon on the stovetop is the ultimate in ease: if you don’t want to heat up your oven or spend too much time in front of it, sautéing a fillet is the way to go. Or if you’re looking for a low-fat option, poaching salmon produces tender, clean-tasting fish.Sautéing salmon means to cook it quickly in a little fat over fairly high heat. The method is easy and fast, and it works best for fillets, making it a great way to get a delicious weeknight dinner on the table. Here’s how to do it:In a nonstick skillet, melt about 1 tablespoon butter over medium high heat and cook until foam subsides and turns deep gold in color, about 3 minutes. Season the fillet with salt and pepper and add to pan, skin side up. Cook without turning for about 6 minutes, until fish turns deep brown. Flip the fish and cook until done to taste, 2 to 4 minutes longer.Poaching salmon gives you cleanly cooked fish that makes a beautiful palette for sauces, or a delicious base for salmon salad, croquettes or burgers. It’s also a good way to get perfectly cooked fish without any added fat. Here’s the basic method:Fill a sauté pan with enough water to cover a fillet, and lower the fish in. Sprinkle in salt, a few peppercorns and a bay leaf.Bring the water to a fast simmer, and turn off the heat. Cover the pan and let the fish cook for 20 to 30 minutes. The salmon should be medium-rare. Note: To add extra flavor to your poached fish, try using a classic court bouillon, a simple cooking broth that is simmered for 20 to 30 minutes with slices of lemon and onions, herbs, salt and pepper. There should be enough to submerge the fish in a pan that the fillet or fillets with fit. Use it in place of the water in the basic cooking method above.
  • Salmon cooked in the oven is a shortcut to dinner bliss. It produces a beautifully burnished entree, it works for all cuts, and it allows you to focus on another part of your meal while the fish cooks. Just watch your cooking time.Roasting salmon fillets in the oven gives you beautiful, succulent fish that doesn’t require constant attention. This method, which we recommend if you’re cooking four or fewer fillets, has you sear the fish in a pan on the stovetop first, which crisps the skin delectably. Then you transfer the fish to the oven for an even finish and succulent flesh. Be sure to use a pan that can move safely between stovetop and oven, like a cast-iron skillet, and don’t crowd it with too many pieces of fish. This is a method that works well with other types of fish, so it’s a good one to put in your arsenal. Here’s how to do it:Heat the oven to 400 degrees. In a cast-iron skillet, melt about 2 tablespoons unsalted butter. Add one 6 to 8-ounce, skin-on salmon fillet, with the skin side down. Cook for 3 minutes over high heat to brown the skin, spooning some of the melted butter over the top of the fish as it cooks. Transfer the pan to oven. Roast until fish is just cooked through, 8 to 10 minutes.Note: for even crispier skin, lightly dust the skin side of individual portions of fillet with flour before placing them in the pan.Roasting fillets by using a baking dish, sheet pan or roasting pan is a simple and delicious way to cook a larger number of fillets at once, though the skin will not be as crisp as that on the seared-and-roasted fillets above. These fillets look most appetizing with a seasoning or glaze brushed on top. (You could also use a version of this method to cook a whole side of salmon for a crowd; here’s an excellent recipe for that.)Here’s how to roast a pan of smaller fillets:Heat your oven to 400 degrees. Place the fillets skin-side down on a lightly oiled, foil-lined sheet pan. Season them with salt and pepper and whatever else pleases you: Chinese five-spice powder, perhaps, or a mixture of brown sugar and mustard.Slide the pan into the top half of your oven. The fillets should be cooked to medium in about 12 minutes.Broiling gives a tasty and attractive burnish to the top (skinless) surface of fillets or steaks, and it is not necessary to turn the fish. A delicious way to do this is on a wooden plank. Fish markets and cookware stores sell untreated cedar and apple wood planks, but never use pine as it will give the fish the flavor of resin. The plank should be soaked in water before use. Otherwise, use a sheet pan with sides, lined with foil if you like.Here’s a simple method: Heat the oven broiler to very hot. Position the oven rack so the salmon is no farther than four inches from source of heat.Broil salmon three to five minutes, watching carefully, until top is attractively browned and fish is slightly undercooked in the middle. If you like salmon done this way, remove from oven and transfer to serving platter. Otherwise, shut off broiler and leave salmon in hot oven another three to five minutes, to desired degree of doneness. (We’ll show you how to check for that.)Note: A foolproof treatment for broiled salmon is to spread regular mayonnaise, either store-bought or homemade, on salmon fillets before cooking. This flavorful coating – it’s an old trick – will become beautifully dappled and toasty-looking, and keep the fish moist. The mayonnaise can be seasoned with mustard, sriracha, garlic, tomato paste or whatever flavor profile might please you. It’s delicious.Salmon cooked en papillote, which means wrapped in a packet of parchment (or foil), is a dramatic way to procure perfectly cooked salmon, but it isn’t difficult. You fold a fillet into a cut piece of parchment, and then layer it with seasonings or perhaps vegetables or citrus fruit. Then you simply bake the packets until done. The steam created by the parchment produces reliably moist salmon, and opening the individual packets at the table makes for a fun way to start dinner. Here’s how to do it:Heat the oven to 400 degrees. Cut a large heart-shaped piece of parchment or foil and place it on a sheet pan. Fold the parchment or foil in half down the middle, place a fillet with its garnishes on one side of each, fold the other side over and crimp the rounded edge tightly closed.Place in oven for 10 to 15 minutes, depending on how done you’d like to serve the salmon. The packages should puff up and make for dramatic serving.
  • Grilled salmon is an earthy, simple way to cook the fish and gives it a particularly smoky, deep flavor. A perfectly grilled piece of salmon is a wonder of summer. And the method even works for whole salmon, if you’ve got a large enough grill. Salmon fillets, steaks and even whole fish are excellent cooked over fire, particularly on a charcoal grill. Steaks are easiest to handle and turn on the grill. Fillets are best grilled with the skin on (cook them skin side down first). Consider buying a grill basket for the fish, which simplifies the process of cooking several pieces at once. Here’s how to grill salmon simply:Heat your coals or gas grill burner very hot. Brush salmon with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Place the fish skin side down on the grate. Cook salmon for about 5 to 6 minutes, then flip. (Here’s one key tip: If the fish is sticking to the grill grate, then it’s not ready to flip.)Cook for another 3 to 10 minutes, depending upon how hot your fire is. The fish is done when the interior is cooked to your liking and exterior is crisp.
  • Salmon, like tuna, can be enjoyed when it’s still on the rare side in the middle and quite moist. Just how rare is a matter of personal preference. Read on to learn how to tell when your fish is ready. An easy way to test for doneness is to look at the color. Slide a sharp knife into the thickest part of the fillet and peek at the flesh inside; rare salmon will have its original vermilion flesh (above, far left), while medium will be pale pink (far right), and medium-rare will fall in the middle.The test that chefs use is easy and reliable. Poke the tip of a paring knife or a thin metal skewer into the center of the fish and touch the side of it – not the point – to your face between your chin and lower lip. If it feels cool the fish will be rare in the middle; warm means medium-rare and hot shows that the fish is thoroughly cooked through.
  • Perfectly cooked salmon is delicious on its own, but the right sauce will add a new dimension and turn a weeknight dish into dinner party fare.An emulsion is a fat-based sauce with flavorings blended in. They can be tricky to prepare and especially to hold without breaking but they are classic accompaniments for salmon. Uncooked emulsions include vinaigrette, easy to prepare and quickly reconstituted by whisking or shaking in a covered container if it separates. Mayonnaise is another uncooked emulsion. It can be made by hand or machine. Cooked emulsions are usually butter-based, with the warm butter whisked into a base that might just be a wine or vinegar reduction, as in a beurre blanc, or a richer egg-based mixture as for the classic hollandaise and its tangy cousin, béarnaise. Seasoned butters, like anchovy butter, or flavored oils can be drizzled on cooked salmon to good effect.If you’re serving something starchy like potatoes, rice, sunchokes or farro with your fish, an herb sauce is the way to go. Try a chermoula, a pungent Moroccan herb sauce, or a classic pesto. Chimichurri, usually reserved for meat, is a great detour for salmon. Salsas deliver acidity, which is always necessary with fish. A pineapple salsa will also add a note of sweetness, a tomato salsa with onion and chile contributes freshness and a hint of fire, and a gingery Asian salsa tempers the richness of the fish with tangy heat. Which one to choose depends not just on the salmon but also on the other components of the dish, including vegetables served alongside.For those who can eat nuts, romesco, a tangy, nut-based Spanish sauce with red peppers and bread, is an excellent idea.

SUNCHOKE SOUP RECIPE - SIMPLY RECIPES
Sep 24, 2021 · Raw sunchokes can be store for about 1 to 3 weeks, depending on how fresh they are when you buy them. How to Prepare Sunchokes . Sunchokes can be boiled, braised, roasted, steamed, sautéed, or even eaten raw. You don't need to peel them; you can just scrub them clean and cook …
From simplyrecipes.com
See details


WHAT ARE SUNCHOKES AND HOW DO YOU COOK THEM? | AMERICA'S ...
Feb 11, 2019 · Sunchokes are great sliced thinly and eaten raw, but they also take well to cooked applications. Like potatoes, sunchokes fry up really well. In our Fried Sunchoke recipe in Vegetables Illustrated, we achieve super-crispy sunchokes with a creamy, tender interior by frying the sunchokes twice.First we fried them whole to get rid of some moisture and cook …
From americastestkitchen.com
See details


WHAT ARE SUNCHOKES AND HOW TO USE THEM - HOW TO COOK SUNCHOKES
Jan 11, 2022 · How to cook Jerusalem artichokes. ... try one of these healthy Jerusalem artichoke recipes and ideas: ... Jones says adding in sunchokes to your breakfast plate is a great use of the produce ...
From prevention.com
See details


OUR 50 BEST VEGETABLE RECIPES TO COOK THIS WINTER
Jan 11, 2019 · Sweet winter carrots are an under-appreciated ingredient. For new carrot recipes, try roasting carrots and turnips together in olive oil then dressing with toasted cumin seeds or coriander, mint ...
From saveur.com
See details


5 INGREDIENT APPETIZER RECIPES | ALLRECIPES
Jerusalem artichokes, or sunchokes, are starchy tubers like potatoes and turnips. When roasted, the skin becomes flaky and the flesh becomes tender, but the taste of a sunchoke is slightly nutty and sweet. Cooked sunchokes are best when eaten within 2 days. When …
From allrecipes.com
See details


OLIVE OIL RECIPES | ALLRECIPES
Jerusalem artichokes, or sunchokes, are starchy tubers like potatoes and turnips. When roasted, the skin becomes flaky and the flesh becomes tender, but the taste of a sunchoke is slightly nutty and sweet. Cooked sunchokes are best when eaten within 2 days. When …
From allrecipes.com
See details


FIVE WAYS TO COOK CHILI PEPPERS - HARVEST TO TABLE
Cook, turning occasionally, until browned and blistered on all sides, about 10 minutes. Season with salt and serve. How to Toast Chili Peppers. Heat an ungreased griddle or heavy skillet over medium heat. Place whole or cut chili peppers on the griddle in a single layer.
From harvesttotable.com
See details


6 OF THE BEST JERUSALEM ARTICHOKE RECIPES - GREAT BRITISH ...
Jan 30, 2020 · Jerusalem artichoke tends to work very well with fruit, particularly citrus, and with nuts too, which enhance the vegetable’s earthy, sweet qualities. Chantelle uses non-dairy butter and milk to cook the Jerusalem artichoke, thus making this soup a …
From greatbritishchefs.com
See details


BEAN VARIETIES THAT ARE EASY TO GROW
Sprays of scarlet flowers. Flattened, very dark green pods are edible and tasty when young; pods toughen as they reach full side. Shell older pods and cook beans like green limas. Vigorous vines. …
From harvesttotable.com
See details


18 PERENNIAL VEGGIES YOU CAN PLANT ONCE AND HARVEST FOR YEA…
Jan 13, 2020 · Once upon a time we had a patch of sunchokes, and they popped up reliably year after year. One summer we had three months without rain, and no water in the well to water our garden. …
From ruralsprout.com
See details


DINNERS — RECIPES — QVC.COM
Check out QVC's selection of recipes for delicious Dinners. QVC has recipes for all your cooking needs. Don't just shop. Cook …
From qvc.com
See details


40 EASY CHRISTMAS APPETIZERS - RECIPES FOR HOLIDAY ...
Nov 10, 2017 · Sunchokes, also called Jerusalem artichokes, actually come from sunflowers. The tubers taste like a sweeter, nuttier version of your typical potatoes. Get the recipe at Country …
From housebeautiful.com
See details


THE BEST RECIPES FROM GUY'S RANCH KITCHEN ... - FOOD NETWORK
Nov 02, 2017 · The Best Recipes from Guy's Ranch Kitchen 61 Photos Each Saturday Guy invites a few of his favorite chefs to his ranch for a fun cook-off between friends. Here are the winning recipes.
From foodnetwork.com
See details


I’M COOKING HOW I WANT TO FEEL THIS YEAR
Jan 15, 2022 · Hello and happy 2022! I stopped making New Year’s resolutions years ago. It turns out no matter how many years in a row I would resolve to stretch every day, sleep eight hours a …
From msn.com
See details


BEAN VARIETIES THAT ARE EASY TO GROW
Sprays of scarlet flowers. Flattened, very dark green pods are edible and tasty when young; pods toughen as they reach full side. Shell older pods and cook beans like green limas. Vigorous vines. …
From harvesttotable.com
See details


18 PERENNIAL VEGGIES YOU CAN PLANT ONCE AND HARVEST FOR YEA…
Jan 13, 2020 · Once upon a time we had a patch of sunchokes, and they popped up reliably year after year. One summer we had three months without rain, and no water in the well to water our garden. …
From ruralsprout.com
See details