This is a bit like the koulibiac recipe I've done before - except with a bit more veg. The parcel sounds rather sinister, but is actually made with puff pastry. Hurrah!
You'll need:
trout - a couple of fillets
200g (ish) cooked rice
1/3 bag of fresh spinach, finely chopped
1 onion, finely chopped
1 lemon, zested
salt and black pepper
250g block puff pastry
Stick the oven on at about 200 degrees C, and get out a large baking tray.
First of all, fry your onion in a little olive oil until it turns translucent. Chuck into a large bowl, and mix in the cooked rice. Add the spinach, and mix until everything has turned green.
Cover the trout with cold water, and bring to the boil. Simmer for 5 minutes or so until the fish is poached, and has turned pink throughout. Remove from the water, flake and add to the spinach/rice mix. Season everything with the lemon zest, and a good screw of salt and black pepper.
Roll out your puff pastry into a long rectangle, and then put carefully on your lined/greased oven tray. Place the fish/rice/spinach mix in a line down the middle of the pastry. It'll be quite a big, fat line - carefully ease the pastry up on both sides, and pinch together at the top (if it doesn't stick, use a little water to wet it).
Sling the whole parcel/roll into the oven, and bake for 25-30 minutes. It's really nice with a green salad, and a wedge or two of lemon.
Showing posts with label koulibiac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label koulibiac. Show all posts
19 January 2010
Fish, spinach and rice parcel
Labels:
fish,
fried rice,
koulibiac,
lemon,
parcels,
puff pastry,
spinach,
trout
14 April 2009
Salmon pie (koulibiac)
I adapted this from a recipe in Olive - seduced by the pictures yet again. It's probably the easiest thing you could make for a dinner party, especially if you have guests who don't eat meat (but do like fish).
Apparently this is a traditional Russian pie, which is usually filled with salmon, or sturgeon. It makes enough for 6, especially if you err on the generous side with the rice.
You'll need
500g block of puff pastry (life is certainly too short to start making your own)
250g (ish) cooked rice
2 hardboiled eggs, chopped
zest and juice of 1 lemon
a very large handful of dill, chopped
2 large fillets of salmon
Stick the oven on at about 200 degrees C.
Cover the salmon with cold water, and bring to the boil. Simmer until the fish is nicely poached, and has turned pink throughout (it'll take maybe 5 minutes, depending on how thick your fillets are). Drain (you could keep the water for a fishy soup), and flake the fish into a bowl, checking for bones as you go.
Mix in the cooked rice, eggs, lemon zest and juice, and dill. The smell is to die for.
Divide your block of pastry in two, and roll each out into a large rectangle. Place one on your baking tray (on a silicon sheet or piece of greaseproof paper), and then carefully spoon the filling onto it, leaving a border round the edge.
Wet the edges/border of the pastry, and then place the other sheet of pastry on top. You'll need to press down the edges, so the filling can't escape. Cut a slit in the top to let the steam escape, and brush with a little milk to glaze.
Bake for 30 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown, and the filling piping hot.
Apparently this is a traditional Russian pie, which is usually filled with salmon, or sturgeon. It makes enough for 6, especially if you err on the generous side with the rice.
You'll need
500g block of puff pastry (life is certainly too short to start making your own)
250g (ish) cooked rice
2 hardboiled eggs, chopped
zest and juice of 1 lemon
a very large handful of dill, chopped
2 large fillets of salmon
Stick the oven on at about 200 degrees C.
Cover the salmon with cold water, and bring to the boil. Simmer until the fish is nicely poached, and has turned pink throughout (it'll take maybe 5 minutes, depending on how thick your fillets are). Drain (you could keep the water for a fishy soup), and flake the fish into a bowl, checking for bones as you go.
Mix in the cooked rice, eggs, lemon zest and juice, and dill. The smell is to die for.
Divide your block of pastry in two, and roll each out into a large rectangle. Place one on your baking tray (on a silicon sheet or piece of greaseproof paper), and then carefully spoon the filling onto it, leaving a border round the edge.
Wet the edges/border of the pastry, and then place the other sheet of pastry on top. You'll need to press down the edges, so the filling can't escape. Cut a slit in the top to let the steam escape, and brush with a little milk to glaze.
Bake for 30 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown, and the filling piping hot.
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