Twelve years ago, I wrote about a gonzo trick for crispy-skinned fish I’d witnessed in the kitchen at Le Bernardin.
One of the fanciest restaurants in New York City (and the world) decidedly wasn’t using stone-ground local grains, but Wondra flour—a 1960s-era convenience product that wondrously dissolves more quickly than all-purpose. I had to tell the world about this technique, and our community quickly fell in love, too. But then, until recently, I forgot the joys of using it myself.
What happened? In the intervening years, another method had taken up full-time residence in my brain: Slow-Roasted Salmon (or Other Fish) from Sally Schneider, which made its Genius debut in 2015. Slow-roasting offers a long runway before overcooking; there is no splattering, no flipping, no doing much more than sliding your fish, any fish, into a low oven. The drumbeat of easy, easy, easy called and I didn’t fight or question it whenever I had fish that needed cooking. (I had a baby, then a pandemic to navigate, then a cookbook to finish.)
Ingredients
1 |
tablespoon canola oil (enough to coat the bottom of the pan)
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4 |
(6-ounce) skin-on fish fillets (like striped bass or salmon)
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1 |
dash fine sea salt
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1 |
dash freshly ground white pepper (black is fine too, if you don't mind the speckles)
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1 |
handful Wondra flour, for dusting
|
1 |
tablespoon canola oil (enough to coat the bottom of the pan)
|
4 |
(6-ounce) skin-on fish fillets (like striped bass or salmon)
|
1 |
dash fine sea salt
|
1 |
dash freshly ground white pepper (black is fine too, if you don't mind the speckles)
|
1 |
handful Wondra flour, for dusting
|
With slow-roasting, the flesh melts like butter and it looks like borderline sushi (“Don't worry if the top of the fish has a slightly transparent, raw look,” Schneider warned us). In other words, it’s a perfect method for people who already love fish. But people who don’t, I recently discovered, are more likely to change their position for a golden sear, a crackly contrast, and a dinner that tastes not far off from fish and chips.
These chip-esque fish re-entered my life abruptly, when my parents handed me a riddle of a dinner to cook (a large misshapen hunk of salmon they wanted seared crisp). Only after struggling to wing it, I remembered the Le Bernardin way: Dust evenly-sized fillets with salt, pepper, and Wondra (I’ve also used rice flour, another superfine, quick-crisper). Sear the skin side, then flip, and move to the oven briefly. The technique isn't difficult; it only takes attention and a few active minutes.
My husband, an avowed fish-resister, and daughter, new to the genre, are hooked—a triumph that forever reaffirms this recipe's Genius status (at least if you ask me, anyway).
Have you tried Le Bernardin’s crispy-skinned fish technique? Tell us in the comments!
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