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chilli-miso salmon with wood ear mushrooms and steamed greens

misosalmon.jpg

quick and easy recipes that are packed full of flavour are something that most of us are on the look-out for which is why i was so excited to see a feature in last month’s observer food monthly about meals that can be ready in 10 minutes or less.

as always when i get a magazine with recipes, i rummaged through looking for something to make (making myself constantly try new recipes seems to be the easiest way to keep away from the rut of predictability). this steamed chilli miso salmon was adapted from one of the ideas in the magazine and was a very quick, easy and tasty supper.

the article on freeganism and the way that supermarkets dispose of food products nearing their “display by” date is also worth reading if you have a spare moment.

cookedmisosalmon.jpg

chilli-miso salmon with wood ear mushrooms and steamed greens* (serves 2)

1 large handful dried chinese wood ear mushrooms

4 pak choy, quartered lengthways and rinsed clean

2 cloves garlic, crushed

1” piece of ginger, peeled and grated

1 tablespoon miso paste

1 red chilli, finely chopped

2 pieces of salmon

1 tablespoon coriander, chopped

2 spring onions, roughly chopped

150ml water

soy sauce

fish sauce

put the dried mushrooms in a bowl and cover with boiling water. when the water has cooled and the mushrooms softened pick through the mushrooms removing any hard bits and dirt. cut the mushrooms roughly and put them in the bottom of a large saucepan. arrange the pak choy on top of the mushrooms and sprinkle with the garlic and ginger.

mix the miso paste with the chopped chilli and smear this over the top of the salmon. sit fish on the greens and scatter over the coriander and spring onion. pour the water into bottom of the pan, and add a splash of soy and fish sauce. put a lid on and cook on a high heat for 5-10 minutes until your salmon is cooked through. finish with a squeeze of lime and serve with rice.

* adapted from a recipe in the observer food monthly

 

Posted on Thursday, September 6, 2007 at 06:37 by Registered Commenterabby in | Comments6 Comments

Reader Comments (6)

I saw that Observer mag ... funny the different things people take from the same information. I LOVED the stuff about the guys who go round the back of supermarkets at night and help themselves to perfectly fine food that is being thrown away. But I didn't really read the 10-minute cook pages, because I really have come to the conclusion that, for me, quick cooking nearly always means starting something ages before you want to eat it - often less than 10 minutes of actual work by the cook, but much of it a day or two in advance. I've still got that mag, so I'll take another look, because your salmon and mushroom recipe looks terrific, so it goes to show how prejudice can blinker.

Thanks for sharing

Joanna
joannasfood.blogspot.com
September 6, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJoanna
hi joanna, it amazes me the variation in what i notice if i flick through a magazine more than once, let alone the variations you're talking about! i've pulled out a few of the ideas which i liked but many of them just don't sound like they'll work/ aren't proper meals. it'd be interesting to see what you find.
September 7, 2007 | Registered Commenterabby
The food hygiene laws make it almost impossible for supermarkets to give the on date stuff away to a homeless shelter and staff have been known to be sacked for taking it. Its madness, but that is the society that we live in.

I love the recipe Abby, and will cook it this weekend - its South Beach friendly too (I have finally bitten the bullet and taken positive action to shead a few pounds) and looks delicious.

Hippolyra
www.fussfreeflavours.blogspot.com
September 7, 2007 | Unregistered Commenterhippolyra
good luck with the diet hippolyra, there are some great south beach blogs out there so i'm sure you won't be short on inspiration.
September 8, 2007 | Registered Commenterabby
I missed that particular Observer food monthly. I always like to flick through a magazine at least twice because I always notice something I missed or have a different take on it.
September 12, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterAmanda
oh yes amanda, i re-read my foodie magazines several times and am always amazed at what i find and have previously missed.
September 12, 2007 | Registered Commenterabby

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