Dinner party

Perfectly Crispy Sea Bass

By on April 4, 2013

So you’ve splurged on the $20-a-pound wild Chilean sea bass.  And now it’s sitting there in the fridge trying to intimidate you.  Mocking your cooking intentions with its pricey pedigree.  Don’t take that trash talk from the fish, people.  As with most expensive ingredients, the key is doing as little as possible and it will all come out ok.  

bass2

The Goods:

  • Sea bass fillets, skin on
  • Wondra or other fine flour
  • White pepper, sea salt
  • Peanut oil

The Execution:

Oven to 425º.  Lightly coat the fillets with the flour, sprinkle with sea salt and white pepper.   Get a pan hot on the stovetop, add a drizzle of oil to lightly coat the pan.  When the oil is shimmering and hot (but before it smokes), add the fillets to the pan skin side down.  Let cook for 3 minutes.  Gently slide a spatula underneath to release the skin from the pan and flip.  Then the whole thing into the oven until the internal temp is about 130°.   Timing the removal of the fish will vary based on how thick it is.  In the one above, it took about 4 minutes.  

The Takeaway:

A great spring dish, served here over mint-pea soup, and garnished with pea shoots, chiffonade of mint and some pickled red onion for a little zip.

p.s.  Some recipes call for an internal temperature for sea bass of 150º, but those people should be ashamed of themselves.  The carryover will get it to about 155º — that’s like firm and almost dry.  We want succulent, melty fish that parts gently into beautiful flakes under the light press of a fork.  You ain’t getting that at 155º.  

Another way to judge is to slide a bamboo skewer into the side of the fish — if the skewer meets no resistance the fish is done.  It it doesn’t slide through, then your fish is under (or way over).  

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4 Comments
  1. Fred

    April 4, 2013

    This looks fantastic! I confess I will attempt this technique on a cheaper cut the first time.

    How about links to your favorite mint-pea soup and chiffonade of mint and some pickled red onion?

    Do other fish talk to you? Do you rise to their bait? (sorry) Have you been working too many late nights?

    • GHT

      April 5, 2013

      hey Fred! I’m thinking about doing a chiffonade video this weekend which i’d put on my FB page. On the mint/pea soup/onion thing that kind of came together by itself so I’ll try to re-create it and take measurements this time. I have no comment on the questionable fish humor. Hope things are going swimmingly for you!

  2. Natalie @ The Devil Wears Parsley

    April 12, 2013

    I love the bamboo skewer tip! This looks amazing.

    • GHT

      April 13, 2013

      thanks Nat! and so easy too

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