ONE-DISH ROCKFISH
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C).
- Layer the spinach in the bottom of a 2 quart baking dish. Lay the rockfish atop the spinach. Scatter the tomatoes around the fish. Pour the broth into the dish. Season the fillet with the dill, garlic powder, lemon pepper, onion powder, salt, and pepper. Place the lemon, onion, and butter on the rockfish. Cover the entire dish with aluminum foil.
- Bake in preheated oven until the fish flakes easily, 20 to 25 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 233.4 calories, Carbohydrate 11.5 g, Cholesterol 63.7 mg, Fat 5.5 g, Fiber 3.9 g, Protein 35.5 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, Sodium 417.2 mg, Sugar 1.9 g
PAN-SEARED ROCKFISH WITH LEMON BEURRE BLANC
Provided by Robert Irvine : Food Network
Categories main-dish
Time 40m
Yield 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Prepare the lemon beurre blanc sauce by combining the lemon juice, wine and cream in a 1-quart saucepan and simmering on medium heat until reduced by half the volume. Meanwhile, heat canola oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Dredge fish fillets in flour and saute in the hot skillet until golden brown. Remove fish from heat and let rest. When the sauce has thickened, slowly whisk in the butter. Place fish on platter, and drizzle sauce around and over the fish to serve.
ROCKFISH RECIPE (BAKED WITH LEMON)
This Rockfish recipe is easy to prepare, incredibly delicious with just a few simple fresh ingredients, and the presentation is stunning!
Provided by Valentina K. Wein
Categories Breakfast Main Course
Time 30m
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Preheat the oven and prep the pan. Preheat the oven to 425°F, adjust a rack to the top third of the oven, and line a sheet pan with foil.
- Prep the fish. Your fish should already be gutted and cleaned. If it's not already scaled, use a fish scaler brush or the back of a knife by rubbing it in the opposite direction of the scales. This might be a bit messy, as the scales tend to "pop" off, but it's quite easy. Rinse the fish and then pat it dry with paper towels.
- Season the fish. Place the fish on the foil-lined sheet pan. Drizzle about 1 tablespoon of the oil on the fish and gently rub it in. Generously sprinkle with salt and pepper. Carefully turn the fish over and repeat this process. Then season the inside cavity with salt and pepper.
- Score the fish if desired. Use the tip of a very sharp knife to cut three slits, about two inches apart, diagonally across the top of the fish. The slits should only cut through the skin - try not to cut into the flesh.
- Add the lemon and herbs. In a small bowl, mix the lemon juice with the remaining tablespoon of oil, thyme and paprika. Drizzle this all over the top of the fish.
- Bake the fish. Place the sheet pan in the preheated 425°F oven and bake just until the fish is cooked through, about 15 minutes. (You can test this by checking the internal temperature which should be about 140°F, and/or use a sharp knife or fork to peek into the flesh near the center. The flesh should flake easily and be opaque. (If it's slightly translucent near the center, that's okay.)
- Broil the fish if necessary. If the skin doesn't become crisp and golden by the time it's cooked, remove it from the oven, turn on the broiler and adjust a rack so the fish will be a couple of inches below it. Place the fish beneath the broiler just until it's golden brown and sizzling. Watch it carefully as it could just take seconds.
- Serve! Serve the finished fish immediately.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 97 kcal, ServingSize 1 serving
ROCKFISH SOUP WITH FENNEL AND POTATOES RECIPE
Now that we've saved the fish, can we save the fishermen?The Pacific rockfish went from near ubiquity to nearly endangered, but today it is a sustainability success story. On top of that, it is everything even the shyest of eaters could want in seafood: It's a firm, white-fleshed fish with a clean, mild flavor.But despite all of that, it's hard to find rockfish at most mainstream markets, and it's nearly impossible to find it on restaurant menus. And if there's nobody buying the fish, pretty soon the small, local fishermen who make a living from it will go out of business.The rockfish's recent history is enough to give a reasonably attentive observer whiplash.A large family of related West Coast fish species, for years rockfish was sold mainly under the invented umbrella name Pacific red snapper - a commercially convenient nod to the superlative Gulf of Mexico fish with which it has but a passing resemblance.Still, that and its amenable character and affordable pricing were enough to make it extremely popular. For years it was one of the iconic fish on the West Coast. So popular did it become, in fact, that the fishery burned itself out. In 2000 it was in collapse, and what once had been a low-cost seafood staple seemed firmly anchored on the Seafood Watch "Avoid" list.But in a remarkable turnaround, this fall that same much-watched sustainability monitor upgraded most rockfish species to either its top-rated "Best Choice" or "Good Alternative" status.Ocean watchers credit the rebound in large part to the creation of a wide swath of no-fish zones up and down the California coast, called Marine Protected Areas, as well as other fishery management moves.But when are we going to start seeing rockfish on our menus?All this makes Paddy Glennon so angry you can almost hear him sputtering over the phone. "This is one of the most abundant local fish we have in Southern California, and yet it's one of the most overlooked on menus," Glennon says.He's in a position to know: As vice president of sales at Santa Monica Seafood, one of Glennon's main jobs is getting fish onto restaurant plates. And he's passionate about the whole local/sustainable thing."You've got these chefs who will talk forever about how their vegetables come from 10 miles away, but the fish they serve on top comes from 1,000 miles away," he says. "I find that complete madness."When he talks to chefs, Glennon says, their argument comes down to presentation: The fashion today is for square fillets that fit nicely on a plate, and the rockfish's roughly triangular fillets throw off the balance.The best place to buy rockfish today is at Asian markets, such as the 99 Ranch Market and Seafood City chains. There you'll usually find at least a couple of varieties, and they'll be sold whole.That is important because, though fillets are certainly fine, it's when you cook the whole fish that you get the full beauty of rockfish. Steamed and topped with pea shoots, deep-fried in a cornmeal crust, braised in white wine and tomatoes, or roasted on a bed of potatoes, it is a cook's plaything.Maybe best of all is serving it in a soup.Make a quick stock from the bones and heads (cook it no longer than 45 minutes or so, or you'll start to pull calcium from the bones, making the broth bitter).Sweat complementary vegetables in a soup pot and strain the stock over. Bring it to a simmer, add the fillets cut into bite-sized pieces and remove the pan from the heat. Within five minutes the fish will be cooked perfectly, moist and firm.Because the fish is mild, choose the accompaniments carefully to avoid overpowering it. For a pop of flavor, finish with a sprinkling of fresh herbs - tarragon, chives, basil, cilantro or even plain old parsley.It may be a little more involved than broiling a piece of salmon, but rockfish is worth the trouble. Being a sustainability success story is all well and good. But being the star of a delicious fish soup is really something special.
Provided by Russ Parsons
Categories MAINS, SOUPS, FISH & SHELLFISH
Time 2h
Yield Serves 6 to 8
Number Of Ingredients 21
Steps:
- Fillet the rockfish, reserving the heads and bones. Cut the fillets into 1-inch pieces, salt lightly, cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate. Place the heads and bones in a large pot and add the wine and water. Bring to a simmer and cook for 10 minutes, skimming any impurities.
- Trim the stalks from the fennel, reserving the trimmings, and divide the bulb into lengthwise quarters. Cut the core from the center of each quarter, then slice the fennel into ½-inch-thick crosswise slices.
- Add the fennel trimmings, carrot, leek, garlic, bay leaf, fennel seeds, peppercorns, thyme, parsley and lemon slice to the pot, pressing them in with the bones but being careful not to stir, and simmer until the broth is flavorful, 35 to 45 minutes.
- Pour the fish broth through a fine mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth into a bowl set over a second bowl of ice. Season with 1 teaspoon salt and whisk to cool. You should have about 4 cups of broth.
- Steam the potatoes until tender, about 15 minutes. Cool, and cut each potato in half lengthwise. (The dish can be prepared up to this point a day in advance and the strained broth and potatoes refrigerated tightly covered.)
- Heat the butter in a soup pot over low heat, add the chopped fennel and cook, covered, until tender, about 15 minutes. Pour the strained broth over the fennel and bring to a simmer over high heat. Add the clams and potatoes, cover, and cook until the clams open, 3 to 4 minutes. Remove the pot from the heat and add the fish pieces, pushing them gently to submerge them in the hot broth, and cover.
- Set aside until the fish is cooked through, about 5 minutes. Taste the broth and add more salt if necessary. Chop together the tarragon, parsley and lemon zest.
- Use a slotted spoon to transfer the fish and vegetables to heated soup plates, then ladle over some of the broth. Sprinkle with the tarragon, parsley and lemon zest mixture, and serve immediately.
ROCKFISH WITH TOMATOES, CAPERS, LEMON, ARTICHOKES, AND FENNEL
Steps:
- Trim the artichoke leaves and stems and blanch in salted, boiling water with a little of the lemon juice. Use only enough water to cover. When tender remove from the water, cool, and clean. Save the leaves for another use. Discard the hairy choke and save the hearts and stem for the dish. Slice into 1/8-inch slices.
- In a saute pan over high heat, add 1 tablespoon olive oil and saute the fennel in it until tender. Add salt and pepper, to taste, remove and keep warm.
- Wipe out the saute pan and add in the peanut oil and bring to medium high heat. Salt and pepper the fillets and brown on 1 side about 5 minutes. Turn and saute 2 more minutes and remove from the pan. Add the sliced garlic and 1/2 of the remaining olive oil and cook 2 minutes. Add the sliced artichokes and saute until starting to brown. Add the tomatoes, white wine, stock, lemon zest and juice, and remaining olive oil and reduce the liquid by 1/4.
- Return the fish to the mixture, add the capers and basil, and check salt and pepper. Cook 2 more minutes until fish is just flaky and check salt and pepper. Divide the fennel among 6 warm dinner plates and top with the fillets. Sauce with the vegetable mixture and serve.
ROCKFISH A LA LEMON
Make and share this Rockfish a la Lemon recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Dancer
Categories Healthy
Time 30m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
- Trim one lemon and cut it into thin slices.
- Grate 1 tablespoon of zest from the second lemon, then squeeze the juice.
- Combine the grated zest, breadcrumbs, salt and pepper in a small bowl and stir to mix; set aside.
- Lay the lemon slices in the bottom of a baking dish.
- Put the lemon juice in a shallow dish.
- Dip the fish pieces in the lemon juice and set them on the lemon slices in the baking dish.
- Sprinkle the breadcrumb mixture evenly over the fish pieces and bake in the preheated oven until the crumbs are lightly browned and the fish is just opaque through, 10 to 15 minutes (depending on the thickness of the fish).
- Transfer the fish to individual plates with a few slices of lemon for garnish; spoon some of the cooking juices over and serve immediately.
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- In a large zip-top food storage bag, mix together oil, vinegar, soy sauce, lemon juice, zest, lemongrass, ginger, garlic, and salt.
- Oil grill grate; grill fish 3-4 minutes, flip and continue cooking 3-4 minutes until internal temperature reaches 145°F.
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Reviews 1Servings 4Cuisine AmericanCategory Dinner
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees. In a medium saucepan, add olive oil and cherry tomatoes on medium heat. Let simmer till the tomatoes start to soften, about 5 minutes. Add two tablespoons of the butter and let melt.
- Prepare a baking sheet or dish with parchment paper and add the fish. Pour sauce and cherry tomatoes on top, evenly coating the fish, add the remaining butter evenly on top of fish filets. Bake for 10-12 minutes still flaky and cooked through. Serve with steamed vegetables and rice.
ROCKFISH WITH LEMON BUTTER AND SAGE RECIPE BY MILAGROS CRUZ
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3.5/5 (12)Estimated Reading Time 50 secs
- Melt the butter in a casserole dish under the broiler. Sprinkle the rockfish filets lightly with Old Bay seasoning, salt, and pepper and add them to the casserole dish. Return the dish to the oven and broil the filets for 6-8 minutes, rotating halfway through. Remove from the oven and baste with the melted butter. Place the lemon slices on top and sprinkle with sliced sage, if desired.
BAKED ROCKFISH ALMONDINE - KEVIN IS COOKING
From keviniscooking.com
4.9/5 (7)Total Time 30 minsCategory Dinner, MainCalories 682 per serving
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper. Start to steam your rice of choice.
- Trim the tougher ends of the asparagus off and discard. Spread the asparagus evenly on top of the parchment paper. Slice 2 of the lemons and spread evenly on top of the asparagus. Set aside.
- Rinse the Alaska rockfish and pat dry with a paper towel. Season both sides with kosher salt and fresh ground black pepper. Lay the Alaska rockfish evenly across the lemon slices.
- In a small sauté pan melt the butter. Add the almonds, juice from remaining lemon and parsley. Sauté for 3-4 minutes. Carefully spoon over each Alaska rockfish filet.
GARLIC PARMESAN ROCKFISH (BAKED) / THE GRATEFUL GIRL COOKS!
From thegratefulgirlcooks.com
Reviews 15Category Entree-SeafoodCuisine AmericanTotal Time 30 mins
- Place Parmesan, bread crumbs, garlic, lemon zest, and a pinch or two of salt and pepper onto a large plate. Combine ingredients, and spread them out evenly on the plate. Place one fillet at a time on top of the mixture, and coat the bottom with crumbs, then flip and coat the other side. Use your fingers to help press coating onto fish. When done, repeat with other pieces, using all the crumb mixture.
- Place rockfish onto oiled baking sheet., leaving space between each fillet. Drizzle each piece with remaining olive oil, and the lemon juice.
10 BEST ROCKFISH RECIPES FOR A UNFORGETTABLE MEAL | WILD ...
From wildalaskancompany.com
- Baked Rockfish Almondine. Like a fillet of sole almondine, but astronomically more affordable, this recipe uses rockfish as a twist on the classic dish.
- Rockfish and Spinach Bake. You need little-to-no culinary experience to make this rockfish and spinach bake. All you are doing, essentially, is layering fresh ingredients into a pan, topping with flavorings, then throwing it into the oven until the fish is flaky and golden brown.
- Moroccan-Spiced Rockfish with Couscous Salad. This recipe for Moroccan-spiced rockfish fillets is all about layers and layers of flavor. The filets themselves are marinated in a Moroccan spice blend called ras el hanout and fresh lemon juice, then served with an herbaceous couscous salad and fresh mint yogurt sauce with hints of cumin, cayenne, garlic and lemon.
- Spicy Rockfish Bites with Mango Honey Mustard Sauce. Best rockfish appetizer ever. This recipe is for pasilla-spiced rockfish croquettes, served alongside a sweet and tangy mustard sauce.
- Pan-Seared Rockfish with Oyster Sauce. If you can get fresh oysters where you are — doesn’t matter which kind, as long as they’re fresh — try your hand at this Michelin-worthy recipe for pan-seared rockfish with a rich oyster sauce.
- “Asian-Style” Baked Rockfish. This recipe for “Asian-style” baked rockfish is a fusion of Korean flavors with its gochugaru and sesame oil and southeast Asian freshness with lime and cilantro.
- Rockfish with Tapenade Sauce. You’ll probably need to stock your pantry with a few specialty ingredients for this recipe for pan-fried rockfish with orange-kalamata tapenade sauce.
- Blackened Rockfish Tacos. Rockfish make for a tender but meaty protein, perfect for an easy night of fish tacos. This recipe for blackened rockfish tacos gives you the option of baking, broiling, or grilling your protein; no matter the cooking method, the foolproof homemade spice rub will pick up that gorgeous blackened color.
- Panko-Crusted Rockfish Tostadas. Tostadas are very much like hard tacos, but flat and crispy — meaning you can pile your tostada as high as you want with your favorite toppings.
- Baked Rockfish with Fennel and Blood Oranges. If you want to wow dinner guests with an elegant meal, check out this recipe for rockfish with fennel and blood oranges.
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