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Title: Sayyadieh (Fish with Rice & Onion Sauce)
Categories: Seafood, Vegetables, Rice, Citrus, Nuts
Yield: 4 Servings
1 1/4 lb Onions; sliced
5 tb Extra virgin olive oil
2 Fish or chicken bouillon
- cubes
Salt & black pepper
1/2 ts Ground cumin
1/2 ts Ground allspice
1 1/2 c Long-grain or washed basmati
- rice
4 Fish filets (6 oz ea) *
1 Lemon; cut in half
2/3 c Pine nuts
Baby green beans or zucchini;
- sliced & sauteed (to serve)
* Use skinned filets of white fish such as bream, turbot,
haddock or cod.
In a large saucepan, fry the onions in 2 1/2 tb oil over low heat,
with the lid on until they're soft and translucent, stirring
occasionally. Remove lid and continue to cook until the onions are
dark brown and caramelized.
Blend the onions into a cream in a food processor. Return to pan.
Add about 4 1/2 c boiling water and crumbled bouillon cubes; season
with salt, pepper, cumin and allspice and simmer for about
10 minutes.
Pour out the onion stock to measure the quantity you need for
cooking rice. Return 2 1/2 c to the pan and put the rest aside to
use as the sauce.
Add rice and a pinch of salt, stir well and simmer low, covered,
for about 10-18 minutes or until rice is tender. (Some brands that
claim not to be parboiled or precooked now take as little as
8-10 minutes, so read the information on the package. Set rice
aside until served.
Pan-fry fish filets, seasoned with salt and pepper, in the
remaining oil for 2-3 minutes on each side until flesh just beings
to flake. Squeeze a little lemon juice over them.
Fry the pine nuts in a drop of oil until lightly browned. Reheat
the onion sauce, adding a little lemon juice to taste.
Serve rice heaped in a mound with the sauce poured over. Arrange
the pieces of fish on top or around the rice and sprinkle with pine
nuts. Serve with sauteed baby green beans or sliced zucchini.
"The distinctive feature of this fish and rice dish from Lebanon is
the flavor of caramelized onions in the brown broth that suffuses
the rice and colors it a pale brown."
From: Arabesque: A Taste of Morocco, Turkey and Lebanon
by Claudia Roden
Adapted from source: Ellen Sweets; The Denver Post
From:
http://www.recipelink.com
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