Salmon - Plating the Dish

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He is 28, but his culinary resume reads like a seasoned 40-something. Washington, D.C. native Executive Chef Barton Seaver, a StarChefs.com Rising Star of 2006 and recently nominated as a Rising Star Chef by the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington, of Hook was taught at an early age about the importance of food.

Dinner in the Seaver home was a seven nights a week family affair. Eating dinner with his family was a communal celebration and involved shopping for the freshest ingredients at local markets, instilling this value in him at a young age. Mac and Cheese was never just out of the box, but prepared with a homemade bamel cheese sauce and pasta made from scratch. Summers spent at a family friends hog farm on the Chesapeake Bay, along with crabbing and going with his father to buy fresh seafood from local fisherman, taught Seaver the importance of supporting local purveyors and using quality and fresh ingredients.

According to Seaver, "Seasonality and locality made sense to me early on." Seaver began his professional career working for popular D.C. restaurants such as Ardeo, Felix, and Greenwood. After years of invaluable kitchen experience, Seaver made his way to Hyde Park, New York, where he trained at the renowned Culinary Institute of America. During his schooling, he spent time in the kitchens of Tru restaurant and The Dining Room at the Ritz Carlton under Sarah Stegner in Chicago.

Upon graduating with honors, he immediately took a fellowship position at C.I.A. as a graduate teacher in both the meat and fish classes. Working in this hands-on environment taught Seaver the importance of proper handling and techniques of exceptionally fresh products, all the while giving him direct access to sources of fish through the eastern seaboard ports. Under the guidance of Chef Corky Clark, he learned to appreciate underutilized species of fish and became a proponent of sustainable ocean products.

Seaver is a certified sommelier through the Sommelier Society of America and is continuing his studies with Wine and Spirits Educational Trust in London. Recently, he was asked to join the Board of Directors of DC Central Kitchen as the culinary force behind the non-profits educational programs. Additionally, he is also active in the Slow Food movement, and recently cooked at the bi-annual Slow Food Terra Madre conference in October 2006 in Italy. Other organization involvements include the Chefs Collaborative, the James Beard Foundation, the National Restaurant Association, the International Seafood Conference, Chefs Congress, a culinary resource to the Environmental Defense Fund, and the Seafood Alliance. As a firm believer in the idea that chefs are the keepers of food culture, he is publishing a monthly article for the online newsletter for StarChefs.com.

In an effort to educate fellow industry members, Chef Seaver will address the issue of sustainability from the perspective of a chef offering solutions to common problems they face in their profession such as buying decisions and their responsibility as the definers of what is fashionable eating. Monthly columns are archived on the StarChefs.com website with new articles posting on the 15th of each month.

Salmon - Plating the Dish

This video will show how to cook salmon and plate the dish.

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Salmon - Plating the Dish

Ingredients

4 6 oz. pieces of wild Alaskan salmon, skin on and pin bones removed

 

3 tbsp. extra virgin olive oil

 

4 heads white endive, sliced in half from top to bottom, remove any brown edge of core

 

½ cup blanched almonds, toasted until golden brown

 

2 cloves garlic, finely minced

 

2 tbsp parsley, chopped finely

 

Sea salt

 

Instructions

1. Pre heat oven to 275 degrees.  Brush salmon filets with oil and season generously with salt and pepper.  Place salmon filets skin side down a baking dish.  Slowly roast in oven until medium doneness, about 25 minutes.

 

 

2. Heat oil in a cast iron pan on high heat.  Place endive cut side down and cook until lightly golden brown.  Add ½ cup of water and reduce heat to a low simmer.  Season with salt and cook until all water is evaporated, about 10 minutes. 

 

3. For the piccata: In a mortar and pestle, crush almonds with olive oil and garlic until they are in small pieces about the size of grains of rice. Stir in oil and parsley.  Season with sea salt.  

 

4. Remove salmon from oven.  Gently turn over.  Skin should peel off very easily.  Discard.  Place two pieces of caramelized endive on each plate.  Place one piece of salmon on top of endive and spoon almond garlic piccata over salmon filet.

 

5. Serve with an arugula salad dressed with shallots, balsamic and extra virgin olive oil.

 

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Transcripts

Barton Seaver: Hi, I am Barton Seaver, and today we are finishing up our slow roasted Alaskan sockeye fillet. We have got caramelized endive, our almond garlic piccata and we are ready to start plating up.

So I am going to take the salmon out of the oven here. It's perfectly cooked, as you can see in this very slow roasting process at 2500, you can see right over here the albumin or the protein of the salmon is just beginning to coagulate, and that fat is just beginning to push out. Now this is fully cooked, but it looks almost raw. Absolutely great. It retains the texture and the moisture of the salmon better than any other way, of any other preparation of cooking. So we have got our plate here, we've got our caramelized endive. So I'm going to take a couple of piece of that out of the pan here. Wow, doesn't that look good. That's caramelized in olive oil, and then top of that we just threw a little bit of lemon juice, and a little bit of water, just to cook, just got to cook down. That's going to be nice, and sweet, and bitter all of the same time. Then I have got a little bit of a syrup still left in there. So make sure you get all that of there. Just put that on the bottom of the plate there. Now we have got our salmon, and as I mentioned, we cooked the salmon with the skin on. But the skin is going to come off at this point, and what we are going to do, this is pretty gentle process. That skin is going to stay right on the baking pan, and that gave so much flavor and moisture to the salmon. Also protects it from the actual, from the pan itself from giving too much heat. So just gently put that right on top. Now it's just important to be very gentle with that fish, so you end up with the whole fillet of it on the plate, and then we've got our almond garlic piccata, which I have a spoon for this time. You want to just give it one last good stir to make sure that all those ingredients are well combined. Doesn't that look so pretty, and I am just going to make it big spoonful of that, right on top, and just let it fall all over the plate here. Now again, that olive oil has all that lemon zest flavor and all that garlic flavor, and it is well, so don't be afraid to let that fall onto the plate there. Alright, and there is our slow roasted wild Alaskan sockeye fillet, isn't that gorgeous? That's good food. The texture of the almonds, with the bite of the garlic and a sweet and bitter characteristics of the endive with that slow roasted fatty taste of salmon, it's good food.

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