Miroton de Cabillaud
Recipe Courtesy Chanticleer, Nantucket, Massachusetts
Rate This RecipeRead users' reviews (1)
Advertisement
Food Network’s Most Popular
-
Recipes
-
Videos
-
Oven Roasted Shrimp and Garlic
(03:29)
-
Grilled Shrimp Scampi
(01:30)
-
Yummy Bacon Wrapped Appetizers
(04:27)
-
Three Simple Appetizers
(02:38)
-
Best Ever Chicken Enchiladas
(05:06)
-
Funky Fried Chicken
(03:31)
-
Sweetie Pie's Mac and Cheese
(00:02:11)
-
Paula's Summer Macaroni Salad
(00:02:05)
-
Shrimp Scampi
(00:03:27)
-
Ham and Cheese Spirals
(02:46)
-
Oven Roasted Shrimp and Garlic
-
Photo Galleries
-
Things to Grill in Foil
11 Photos
-
Recipe of the Day: What to Cook in May 2013
37 Photos
-
Restaurant-Style Meals to Make at Home
23 Photos
-
Easy Summer Party Recipes
8 Photos
-
Healthy Chicken Recipes
41 Photos
-
Homemade BBQ Sauce Recipes
14 Photos
-
Healthy Summer Sides
13 Photos
-
Best BBQ Rib Recipes
26 Photos
-
Cupcake Wars Season 3 Winning Recipes
12 Photos
-
Family Favorites: Chicken 5 Ways
5 Photos
-
Things to Grill in Foil
-
Topics














Review This Recipe
You must be logged in to review this recipe.
or Sign Up to Review
Average Rating:
Total Reviews: 1
Showing 1-1 of 1
Sort by:
SELECT
By sconseteer
Fall River, MA
on February 27, 2006
Flag
Flag This Review?
Please provide the reason why you think this review is inappropriate.
or Cancel
This is an easy way to make a beautifully flaky, moist and tender dish out of a fish that can turn into cotton if youdon't have the right preparation to go by.
The idea of using a julienne of cornichons or gherkins with a whitefish put me off this at first, but when my curiosity got the better of me I went ahead and tired it out.
The result was a subtle piquancy that offset the sweetness of all those onions, creating a warm, fuzzy glow on the palette that reminded me of the secret love ingredient that mediterranean grandmothers slip into everything they make when no one is looking.
This recipee achieves that effect with very little effort, and is definitely worth a try.
The adventurous ingredients are an interesting eye opener, but the real value of making this dish is the cooking technique, which is easy to master.
I have prepared other fish recipees using the method described in this one with fantastic results, even when the ingredients are quite different.
Try this a few times and you'll acquire a very useful and adaptive approach to creating richly favored, beautifully textured dishes from even the largest and thickest cuts of fish.