Crispy Baked Old Bay Swai with Minted Farm Share Peas
Spicy seasoned swai on a bed of fresh minted farm share peas.
I knit, I write, or I read. In the wintertime I knit, mostly on a rainbow blanket that is long enough to keep me warm during hockey games. The rest of the year I'm writing or reading as knitting when it's hot out doesn't thrill me.
As an indented aside, that's part of the reason I've been working on this blanket since I was pregnant with my first child, who is in high school. Mostly it's just because I knit slowly. Like I cook slowly. The years in Hawaii were a total wash.
Last Spring, while waiting in the orthodontist's office, I was flipping through an EveryDay with Rachael Ray magazine. The No-So-Mushy Peas caught my eye, because I look for ways to use the fresh peas from our Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm share. This recipe is described as a spring classic, and I get that--I'm craving it again this year! Just like Alanna's Chicken Cider Stew heralds Fall to me, Rachael Ray's fish and peas now mean Spring.
For other recipes using peas, please see my Pea Recipes Collection, part of the Visual Recipe Index by Ingredient. I've got additional interesting recipes on my Colorful Veggies Above the Ground board, one of my Pinterest boards (link to follow me on Pinterest).
Crispy Baked Old Bay Swai with Minted Farm Share Peas (slightly adapted from the April 2014 issue of EveryDay with Rachael Ray, you can find the recipe here on Food Network)
3 cups panko1 Tablespoon seafood seasoning (I use Old Bay since I grew up eating blue crabs in MD)
2 teaspoons lemon pepper seasoning
1 Tablespoon dried minced onion (I used Tastefully Simple Onion Onion)
1 Tablespoon chopped fresh thyme leaves
1 Tablespoon snipped fresh chives
1 egg, beaten
4 fillets Swai or other white fleshed fish, rinsed and patted dry
1 cup fresh flat leaf parsley leaves, packed
1 cup fresh mint leaves, packed
1 quart fresh pea pods, shelled (about 3 cups--interestingly some dogs like pea pods)
1 Tablespoon olive oil
¼ cup finely chopped spring onions (white with a little bit of green parts)
1 cup chicken stock (here's how I make mine)
½ teaspoon salt (unless your stock is salted)
to serve--sherry vinegar to splash on top of a lemon to squeeze
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit and place a cooling rack onto a rimmed baking sheet.
In a shallow pan, stir the panko with the seasonings and herbs. Set aside. Pour egg into another shallow pan. Set up a work flow, as shown above [kitchen dogs optional], and dip each piece of fish first into the egg, coating both sides, then into the panko, coating both sides and pressing into the fish. Transfer to the prepared pan. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes until the fish is firm to touch, opaque in the center, and the panko is nicely browned.
While the fish is baking, dump the herbs into a food processor and pulse a few times until they are blended. Scrape out and set aside, then dump the peas into the food processor and pulse to chop roughly.
Add the oil to a medium saucepan over medium heat, and sauté the onions until softened, about 3 to 5 minutes. Add the chicken stock, salt if using, and peas, then bring to a simmer over medium high heat. Cook 10 minutes, then stir in the reserved herbs.
Serve the fish on a bed of peas with a splash of vinegar.
This is a beautiful dish. I love the mint and peas. I bet it tastes like Spring in every bite.
ReplyDeleteChristie,
DeleteYou bet it does! Makes me crave it every year.
Thanks!
such a gorgeous spring supper and lucky for me, peas are the one vegetable my kids agree on
ReplyDeleteHeather,
DeleteI think my kids need more exposure to peas other than through the bag of frozen peas applied to bumps and bruises!
Thanks!
My husband puts Old Bay on everything! I'm sure he would love this... and the minted peas sound delicious too!
ReplyDeleteJudy,
DeleteWhen you're craving that flavor combo, there is nothing better than Old Bay to satisfy.
Thanks!
Love the fact that you backed the fish and the peas and mint sounds like the perfect sides!
ReplyDeleteMichelle,
DeleteI need to venture more into grilling fish, but I'm pretty comfortable baking seafood.
Thanks!
I'm sure the dogs argue they are not optional.
ReplyDeleteI love the picture of the peas still in their pod. Beautiful.
Meghan,
DeleteAround here, kitchen dogs are mandatory. But YMMV.
Thanks--I'm tickled with that photo too.
How sad is that I've never even handled a pea in a pod?
ReplyDeletePam,
DeleteI'm going to give my stock answer. 12. It's 12 sad that you've never handled a pea in a pod. They are easy to grow and a terrific snack while weeding in the Spring garden.
Thanks!