Fish baked in sea salt

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I first cooked this dish in a camper van, on a beach in Vieux Boucau, Aquitaine, France, many years ago. The salt seems to make it easy to remove the skin and keeps the fish really moist - it's also quite an impressive looking dish. We bought most of the ingredients from the local fishmonger who strangely, looked exactly like Poseidon himself!

Don't be worried about the amount of salt used, it sticks to (and helps to remove) the skin and does not make the dish the least bit salty. The large grains of coarse sea salt don't seem to permeate the fish. In France, Sel gris, the grey coloured sea salt is cheap and easily available in all supermarkets, that won't be the case in the UK unfortunately.

You really do need coarse sea salt for this recipe, and quite a lot. I've heard of 'the careful' using dishwasher salt for this though I would read the packaging very carefully first!

Fish baked in sea salt
Electus
Not a grain of salt on the fish
Servings:Serves 2
Calories per serving:278
Ready in:40 minutes
Prep. time:15 minutes
Cook time:25 minutes
Difficulty:Average difficulty
Recipe author:Chef
First published:20th January 2013

Best recipe review

Not a taste of salt

5/5

Strange idea which works, and it really is not salty.

The Judge

Ingredients

Printable πŸ–¨ shopping πŸ›’ list & πŸ‘©β€πŸ³ method for this recipe

Parsley and lemon sauce

Mise en place

  • Preheat the oven to 180Β°C; 350Β° F; gas Mk 4; Moderate/Medium

Method

  1. Dry the fish skin with a paper towel and stuff the belly cavity with the onion and herbs
  2. Pour a very thin layer of salt into a baking tray as near to the size of the fish as you can find - this uses less salt!
  3. Lay the fish in the baking tray and completely cover with sea salt
  4. Bake the fish for 25 minutes.
  5. When 20 minutes is nearly up, make the sauce.
  6. Melt the butter in a small pan, add a grind of pepper and the zest and juice of a lemon, mix well.
  7. Once the fish is cooked, the salt crust should lift off, together with the skin. brush any reaming salt from the fish and serve, covered with the hot sauce and a sprinkle of fresh herbs.

Serving suggestions

Serve with new potatoes and peas.

Variations

Normally I would have copious amounts of fennel or dill from the garden, but being January in England, I have none. I will not pay good coin for a measly bunches of supermarket herbs so added three tablespoons of fennel seed to the sea salt. It was a good substitute, though fresh herbs would be better.

Chef's notes

I used 2 small bream instead of 1 large sea bass this time, both in the same salt-dish. It presents much better with just one fish - hence the lacking photographs!

Very recently I saw Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall cooking seabass in salt, he used a few kilograms of normal table salt, cleverly dampened down with little water to make a firm 'cement'. Using this method packed the salt around his sea bass on a flat tray, rather like a jelly-mould of yester-year. It made a great table presentation. I will try this next time.

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