Recipes>Fish Recipes

Rick Stein’s Braised Brill

by Rick Stein from Rick Stein’s Secret France

Serves 4

Rick Stein’s autumnal braised brill, as seen on his BBC2 series Secret France, is brimming with porcini and chestnut mushrooms that help to flavour a silky, rich sauce.

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Rick Stein’s Secret France

Rick Stein

Rick Stein’s Secret France

A culinary journey across France with Rick Stein

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Secret French recipes alongside authentic classics

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Introduction

This is very much an autumnal dish making use of fresh ceps (porcini) and chestnuts and inspired by my early autumn visit to the Dordogne. I’ve had a lot of success partnering flatfish like brill or turbot with quite meaty sauces. It’s a bit like putting curry with fish – some say curry spices completely mars the flavour but I always say as long as the fish is beautifully fresh, they enhance it. Some people don’t approve of adding cheese to a fish dish, but I think a little salty, acidic, earthy Pecorino adds a sort of umami element to the sauce. You’ll see that I’ve added some slow-cooked pig skin too which gives the sauce a lovely silkiness. You can leave this out, though, or use a little diced ham fat instead.

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Ingredients

600mlchicken stock
700gbrill, plaice or flounder fillets, skin on
100gunsalted butter
3shallots, finely sliced
60gconfit pork skin, very finely diced, or diced ham fat
75mldry white vermouth
100gvacuum-packed chestnuts, sliced
100gfresh ceps, sliced
2 tsplemon juice
20gPecorino Sardo cheese, finely grated
small handful flatleaf parsley, chopped
salt and black pepper

Method

Pour the chicken stock into a wide pan and boil rapidly until it is reduced by half. Pour it into a jug and set aside.

Cut across each fillet so you have 4 pieces. Melt half the butter in a pan large enough to hold the fish fillets in one layer. Add the shallots and diced pig skin or ham fat and cook gently for 4–5 minutes. Add the vermouth, chestnuts and reduced chicken stock, then simmer for another 4–5 minutes until thickened. Add the ceps and lemon juice, and season with salt and pepper.

Place the fish fillets on top of the ceps, cover with a lid and cook for 6 minutes over a medium heat until the fish is cooked through. Carefully remove the fish and keep it warm. Add the remaining butter and the cheese to the pan and boil rapidly for a few minutes until the sauce coats the back of a spoon nicely. Stir in three-quarters of the parsley. Put the fish back in the pan and garnish with the rest of the parsley, then serve with buttery mashed potato and wilted spinach.

If ceps aren’t in season, use large chestnut mushrooms with 20g of dried ceps. Reconstitute the dried ceps before using.

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Ingredients
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