As part of our exams last term at college,
we had to produce a three-course meal for four people - all for just £8.50 and
cook it in less than two and a half hours. And I don’t mean £8.50 a head.
Strange task to be set that goes against what you’ve been taught i.e. to use
quality ingredients, which are generally not cheap. It certainly made us do our
research.
During June, at the time of the exam, mackerel are in abundance around the cost of south west England, and there should be no reason at all why you shouldn’t be able to buy them fresh, unfrozen and whole from any supermarket…… or so you would think. Well actually, out of all the major supermarkets I tried, Morrison’s was the only one, which had fresh Mackerel on their counter that hadn’t been previously frozen and for a reasonable price. This concept of freezing fish then defrosting it for the fresh fish counter baffles me? That’s supermarkets for you.
During June, at the time of the exam, mackerel are in abundance around the cost of south west England, and there should be no reason at all why you shouldn’t be able to buy them fresh, unfrozen and whole from any supermarket…… or so you would think. Well actually, out of all the major supermarkets I tried, Morrison’s was the only one, which had fresh Mackerel on their counter that hadn’t been previously frozen and for a reasonable price. This concept of freezing fish then defrosting it for the fresh fish counter baffles me? That’s supermarkets for you.
This was my main course, It’s an easy,
tasty summer dish which can be enjoyed either out in the sun or, inside on a
wet July evening. The simplicity of this dish would probably explain why I
didn’t get marked very well for showing much skill in the exam. Oh well, it
tasted damn good anyway!
Couscous:
1 Red Pepper:
½ tsp of dried chili flakes
½ tsp of ground coriander
Pinch of cinnamon
2tsp of tomato paste
1 Vegetable stock cube
4 garlic cloves
200g Couscous
Handful of chopped coriander
150g of diced cucumber
2 tbs of Olive oil
Mackerel:
1 tsp of ground cumin
1tsp of ground coriander
½ tsp of smoked paprika
1dsp of Oilve oil
2 Mackerel
Preheat the oven to 180°.
To make the Harissa; Under a hot grill,
roast the pepper until chard all over, transfer to a sealed bag and leave until
cool enough to handle.
Leaving the garlic cloves in their skins, wrap
in a small parcel of tinfoil and bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes or until
the garlic is just soft.
When the pepper is cool, remove the skin
and seeds and finely chop the flesh. Squeeze the garlic from its skin and add
to a pestle and mortar along with the pepper and spices, 2 tablespoons of olive
oil and the tomato paste.
Beat the ingredients together to a fine paste
cover and set aside.
Fillet the mackerel and remove any pin
bones, cut shallow diagonal lines down the skin.
In a large enough bowl, mix together the
spices and spread this over the fillets, leave in the fridge until ready to
use.
In a mixing bowl, add the couscous with a
tablespoon of olive oil mix well.
In a measuring jug pour 150ml of hot water
over the stock cube, stir until completely dissolved and add this to the
couscous. Add enough extra hot water to only just cover the couscous stir
briefly, cover with cling film and leave for 15mins.
When the couscous is cooked, stir it with a
fork until loose then stir in the harissa paste.
When the couscous is at room temperature
add the rest of the fresh ingredients, season to taste.
Cook the mackerel skin side up under a hot
grill until just cooked - about 6 minutes. Serve on top of the couscous and
garnish with coriander and lime wedges.
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