Fish substitutions: swordfish, tuna (if using tuna, leave it rare in the center), halibut, red snapper (with skin), striped bass (with skin).
Serves 4
For the fish:
1 Tbsp lime juice
3 Tbsp olive oil
Salt and pepper
4 mahi fillets without skin (6-8 oz each)
1 Tbsp of butter
- Mix lime juice, olive oil, salt and pepper in a glass or stainless steel bowl. Add mahi fillets and turn to coat. Cover and marinate in the fridge for 30 minutes to 2 hours.
- Dry the fish off on paper towels before cooking.
- Heat up a large non-stick (or well seasoned cast iron) skillet over medium high heat. Add the butter and swirl to coat the skillet.
- Add fish fillets to the skillet in one layer. Sear for 8 minutes per inch of thickness turning half way through cooking time. To test for doneness, separate the flakes in the thickest part of the fish with a fork and peek inside. Fish is done when a trace of translucency remains in the center.
- Top with Tomato Avocado Salad (see below).
12 cherry tomatoes halved (or 3 large ones diced)
1 avocado, stoned, peeled, and sliced
1/4 small red onion, sliced very thin
2 tsp lime juice
1 tsp olive oil
2 Tbsp cilantro or parsley
Salt and pepper to taste
Mix all ingredients together.
I attended this class, and couldn't wait to make it on my own. I used the Tomato Avacado Salad as a side dish for pan seared tuna. It was a hit!
ReplyDeleteHi Jody,
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear from you! That salad with tuna sounds excellent. What a great idea.
Cheers,
-Helen
What does "stoned avocado" mean?
ReplyDelete(it couldn't possibly mean what i'd expect it to.. lol)
Dmitry, Chicago
Hi Dmitry,
ReplyDeleteIt does not mean any form of torture or punishment. Stoned means pitted :)
Cheers,
-Helen
Thanks, Helen. Although, to be honest, I wasn't thinking of the biblical "stoned", but rather the hippie "stoned".
ReplyDelete