
Thank you Waitrose
Originally uploaded by Manne.
When I really have no clue what I want to cook, I usually do a quick look online just before I leave the office to see what recipes I can find that are inspiring, quick to cook and slightly different.
Today I checked out Waitrose's web site for the first time since I have seen the recipe leaflets and brochures they hand out in store. Found this excellent recipe called "Oriental Salmon and Soya Bean Salad" that looked yum.
This is the result, after quite a lot of improv. Still yum, and really healthy too. And so quick to cook.
Ingredients (serves 2, or me coming home after a long run)
2 salmon fillets (skin still on)
1 tin of broad beans
1/2 pack of string beans (full pack is 265 gr)
2 chopped shallots
8 cherry tomatoes on the vine, halved
1 pack of fresh coriander (30 gr)
1 tbsp Chinese Five Spice paste
1 tbsp Thai sweet chilli sauce
1 tsp soy sauce
1 tbsp corn or potato flour
1 tsp sesame oil
1 tbsp cooking oil
Method
Start with cutting the string beans in half. Put them in a steamer for five minutes, and simmer the broad beans in a sauce pan for the same amount of time. Also chop up the coriander and put in a salad bowl.
While the beans are tendering up, make the dressing. In a small bowl put the chilli sauce, the Chinese Five Spice paste, the soy sauce and 2 tbsp of boiling water. Give it a good stir so the paste dissolves. Set aside.
When the beans are done, put them in a cold water bath so they cool down and crisp up a bit.
Mix the chopped shallots with the corn flour in a bowl until the shallots are evenly coated. Warm a non stick frying pan on high heat, add half of the oils, then add in the shallots. Fry until golden, about 1-2 minutes. Set aside on a kitchen paper towel.
Return the frying pan to the heat and add the remaining oil in. Now place the salmon fillets skinside down (Waitrose says skinside up which is bonkers, you want the skin down from the start so it crisps up) and let fry for 4-6 minutes (depending on thickness) until you can see the meat getting light and opaque up until just under half the thickness of the fish. Flip them over (see how golden and crispy the skin now is?) and let fry for another 3-5 minutes until completely heated through and crispy on both sides. Be careful not to over cook them and ruin the velvety goodness inside.
While the salmon is cooking, put the beans, the shallots and the tomatoes in the salad bowl with the coriander and drizzle with 1-2 tbsp of the dressing. Mix it all up.
When the fish is done, place a small mound of salad on a plate and the salmon on top. Drizzle some of the remaining dressing over the fish and salad, serve immediately.
Absolutely bonkers good.

Hi Manne!
Came here through Andreas Åkessons "LinkedIn" and just wanted to say HEJ! Hope everything is OK with you. I will surely try one of your recipies, looks good! Take care, Pernilla (former Petersson) and friend from 6M
Posted by: Pernilla | April 27, 2009 at 07:46
I remember when I was a child, I'm volunteering to buy food stuff at the wet market near our place. I usually scanned cook books to try new recipe even at my young age. My parents sometimes scolded me for food not known by them and because I'm still young, the taste was not that good. But at least I tried. Now, I know how to cook because I'm eager to learn even at my young age. And since internet is already an easy reach, I'm still checking for new recipes but during my free time only.
Posted by: hampers | June 22, 2009 at 06:18