Easter

Halibut Over Wilted Escarole

by:
January 11, 2010
4
1 Ratings
Photo by James Ransom
  • Serves 1
Author Notes

Escarole has broad, flat leaves and is less bitter then other members of the endive family. Despite the difference in appearance, it resembles radicchio in taste. *VARIATION* Sea Bass, Salmon or Tilapia can easily be substitute for halibut. The same 8 minutes per inch of thickness cooking time would be applied —joannE.

Continue After Advertisement
Ingredients
  • 1 tablespoon Butter
  • 1/2 teaspoon Fresh Dill, Chopped
  • 8 ounces Escarole (Approx 1/2 of a Large Head)
  • 1 Medium Shallot
  • 1 Clove Garlic
  • 1 Small Halibut Filet
  • 1 teaspoon Olive Oil
  • Zest from 1 Orange
  • 1/4 cup White Wine
  • 1 Lemon Wedge (1/8 Whole Lemon)
Directions
  1. Using a fork, combine 1 Tbs butter and ½ Tsp fresh dill in a small bowl.
  2. Rinse escarole, shake off excess water, and discard the darkest, outermost leaves (these tend to be the most bitter).
  3. Tear escarole into two inch pieces.
  4. Finely mince garlic and shallot.
  5. Season the halibut fillet with salt and pepper on both sides.
  6. Preheat a small Dutch oven, or a saucepan with a tight fitting lid, over medium high heat.
  7. Sweat garlic and shallots in the olive oil for one minute.
  8. Toss in escarole and orange zest with the garlic and shallots.
  9. Add wine and quickly place halibut, skin side down, on the bed of greens.
  10. Top the fillet with the butter and cover.
  11. Reduce heat to medium and allow fish to steam for approximately 12 minutes (8 minutes per inch of thickness).
  12. When the fish in thoroughly cooked (opaque and flaky), place the wilted greens in the center of serving place and top with the halibut fillet. Garnish with a squeeze of fresh lemon juice and season with salt and pepper.
Contest Entries

See what other Food52ers are saying.

3 Reviews

lindamettler July 7, 2017
This was really very good and seemed healthy after a week in Mexico! I had to use vermouth in place of wine, and baby bok choy instead of the escarole. The halibut was perfectly cooked in 12 minutes!
Sodium G. January 12, 2010
Oh my - this recipe is sodium girl ready. No salt! I love all the fresh herbs and citrus that give it flavor. And I'm mildly obsessed with escarole, so this is a winner in my book.
SunnySideUp (. January 11, 2010
this looks great!