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Moqueca (Brazil)

Emeril Lagasse

Recipe courtesy Emeril Lagasse, 2004

Show: Emeril LiveEpisode: Portuguese World Influence

Rated: 5 stars out of 5Rate itRead users' reviews (5)

  • Cook Time:

    20 min

  • Level:

    Easy

  • Yield:

    6 to 8 servings

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Times:

Prep
20 min
Inactive Prep
1 hr 0 min
Cook
20 min
Total:
1 hr 40 min
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Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 pounds red snapper, cut into 2-inch pieces (or substitute with grouper, red fish, flounder, striped bass, escolar or any other white fleshed fish)
  • 1 cup roughly chopped onion, plus 1 cup julienned onion
  • 2 cups roughly chopped tomatoes, plus 2 tomatoes sliced into 1/4 inch rounds
  • 2 cloves garlic, plus 1 tablespoon minced garlic
  • 5 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro leaves
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 3 tablespoons fresh-squeezed lime juice
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 1/4 cup Piri Piri, recipe follows
  • 1 (14.5-ounce) can coconut milk

Directions

Place the fish in a large non-reactive mixing bowl. In the carafe of a blender, combine the chopped onion, the chopped tomatoes, 2 cloves of garlic, 1 tablespoon of cilantro, 1 teaspoon of salt, and the lime juice. Blend until smooth in the blender, then pour directly over the fish. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour.

Heat a large saute pan over medium-high heat. Add the olive oil to the pan, and once hot, add the julienned onions to the pan and saute, stirring often until translucent, about 3 to 4 minutes. Add the minced garlic to the pan and saute for an additional 30 seconds. Pour the fish and the marinade into the saute pan and add the remaining teaspoon of salt, the Piri Piri, and the coconut milk and stir to combine. Once the liquid comes to a boil, dot the top of the pan with the sliced tomatoes and cover with a lid. Reduce the heat to medium-low and continue to cook until the flesh starts to flake, about 10 minutes.

Remove the cover from the pan and sprinkle the remaining 4 tablespoons of cilantro over the fish. Serve accompanied by steamed white rice.

Piri Piri:

1 tablespoon, plus 1/2 cup olive oil

5 cloves garlic, smashed

4 cayenne chile peppers, stemmed, ribs and seeds removed, and rough chopped (or substitute other hot red peppers)

1/4 cup fresh squeezed lemon juice

1/2 teaspoon salt

Heat a small saute pan over medium-high heat. Add 1 tablespoon of the olive oil to the pan. Once the oil is hot, add the garlic and peppers to the pan. Saute, stirring often, until the edges of the garlic start to turn brown, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the lemon juice to the pan, and remove from the heat.

Place the contents of the saute pan in a blender and add the salt. Puree the peppers and garlic in the blender until mostly smooth. Drizzle the remaining 1/2 cup of olive oil through the feed tube of the lid of the blender. Let cool before using, and store refrigerated in an airtight container.

Yield: 3/4 cup

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Read more Comments & Reviews (5)

Comments & Reviews

  • recipe Moqueca (Brazil)
    Val APO, AP 05-08-2009

    Flag

    Worth a shot!

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    This dish was absolutely delicious. If you are a curry fan, this is something you will want to try. My husband is from Iowa... so he wasn't crazy about it because it is not something he is used to eating, but if you like tropical and Caribbean type foods, you probably have a pallet for it. It was easy to make as most of these ingredients were already in my fridge. I made this with flounder, and left out the red peppers as there were none available at the base commissary. So far its my favorite recipe from the Food Network!Read more
  • recipe Moqueca (Brazil)
    Valentina Hampton Bays, NY 10-07-2008

    Flag

    Great for Striped Bass !

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    My husband caught a striped bass and we usuallygive it away because we dislike the fishy flavor it sometimes has. Well not... this time. I made this recipe and and served it to my in-laws and they have not stopped raving. it was so delicious tender and flavorful. Thanks Emeril you make me look like a great cook! Read more
  • recipe Moqueca (Brazil)
    Anonymous 09-24-2008

    Flag

    fabulous

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    We had moqueca in South America on vacation nearly twenty years ago and loved it. The chef there told us it was made with... local piranha...not having access to that here, I made it as the recipe said, with snapper, and found it nearly identical to the original. A couple of modifications I made after tasting it -- I added a touch of tomato paste to the sauce, because the only tomatoes I could get here in Bermuda were pretty tasteless; and I added a couple of squirts of sriracha, as the chilis I used for the piri=piri weren't hot enough (they were thai red chilis, again all I could get). But my 12-year-old even raved!Read more
  • recipe Moqueca (Brazil)
    greg long branch, NJ 05-24-2007

    Flag

    Amazing

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    Incredible dish
  • recipe Moqueca (Brazil)
    Michele Palm Bay, FL 06-29-2005

    Flag

    Holy Moly

    Rated: 5 stars out of 5
    This is so good we saved the leftover sauce ,bought more fish and had it again several days later.So so good.The first time... we made it with Red Fish that my husband caught that day ,then we made it again with bullnose snapper that I bought.I served it with basamati rice.This was also very easy recipe.Read more
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