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Asian Salmon with noodle broth

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Recipe

Jamie!

 

Yield

4 servings

Prep

5 min

Cook

25 min

Ready

30 min

Ingredients

Salmon

4 x 180g salmon, pin-boned, skin on
2cm piece of ginger
2 cloves of garlic
1 small red onion
½ red chili
1 tbs soy sauce
2 limes
Chinese five-spice

Noodle broth

4 spring onions
1-2 red chilis
2 cloves of garlic
2cm piece of ginger
1 tsp Chinese five-spice
2 tsp cornflour
900ml vegetable stock
200g sugar snap peas
200g dried fine egg noodles
Soy sauce (to taste)

Salad

Large bunch of coriander
400g beansprouts
100g cashew nuts
1 tbs honey
½ red chili
1 small ripe mango
Soy Sauce
Sesame oil
1 lemon or lime

Ingredients

Salmon

4 x 180g salmon, pin-boned, skin on
2cm piece of ginger
2 cloves of garlic
1 small red onion
½ red chili
1 tbs soy sauce
2 limes
Chinese five-spice

Noodle broth

4 spring onions
1-2 red chilis
2 cloves of garlic
2cm piece of ginger
1 tsp Chinese five-spice
2 tsp cornflour
900ml vegetable stock
200g sugar snap peas
200g dried fine egg noodles
Soy sauce (to taste)

Salad

Large bunch of coriander
400g beansprouts
100g cashew nuts
1 tbs honey
½ red chili
1 small ripe mango
Soy Sauce
Sesame oil
1 lemon or lime

Directions

Preheat the oven to 250°C and boil the kettle.

Peel the ginger, then peel and roughly chop the onion and place in a blender.

Crush two garlic cloves into the blender along with the chili and soy sauce.

Squeeze in the juice of the limes and blend until you have a smooth sauce.

Pour the sauce into an ovenproof dish that can accommodate the salmon fillets without too much excess room. The idea is to poach the salmon while it bakes in the oven.

Place the salmon on a chopping board and evenly score a few 1cm deep slices into the skin. This will help the salmon to absorb the flavour of the sauce as well as helping it to cook more quickly.

Drizzle a little olive oil over the salmon and then sprinkle on some Chinese five-spice, salt and pepper. Place the fillets into the ovenproof dish, skin side up, then put it into the oven on the top shelf to cook for 18 minutes.

Start the salad by emptying the beansprouts into a large bowl. Place a few coriander leaves to one side to use later as a garnish then remove the remaining leaves from the stalks. Slice up the stalks and add them to the beansprouts.

Now start the broth by heating a little olive oil in a saucepan on a medium heat. Trim and slice the spring onions and the red chilis and then place them into the pan.

Crush two garlic cloves into the saucepan. Peel and grate the ginger into the saucepan and fry for a few minutes.

Place a frying pan on a low heat, then add a splash of olive oil and the cashews. Toast them until they start to colour.

Stir in one teaspoon of Chinese five-spice and three teaspoons of cornflour to the pan containing the broth. Don't be alarmed if everything looks a little dry. Add the vegetable stock and sugar snap peas then turn up the heat. Once the broth is boiling, taste it and add extra soy sauce if necessary. Add the noodles then put a lid on the saucepan and boil for another five minutes.

Remove the pan containing the cashews from the heat and drizzle over the honey, making sure the cashews are completely coated.

Finely slice the chili half and peel the mango with a speed peeler. Remove the stone from the mango, slice or cube it, then add it to the salad along with the chili and cashews. Dress the salad with soy sauce, sesame oil, extra virgin olive oil and the juice from one lemon or lime. If you're unsure about quantities, keep tasting as you go.

By now the salmon should almost be cooked and the skin should look crispy. Divide the noodle broth between bowls and top with a fillet of salmon. Be sure not to waste any excess sauce - spoon it on top of the salmon.



* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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