Despite the fact that my house still smells like a fry vat this morning, I adore these cakes. My recipe leans heavily on one I found at totallybarbados.com that uses salt fish. Folks in this neck of the woods call them hush puppies. And, boy were they good. So light and fluffy inside, with a delicate flavor.
In truth, the fact that my batter sat for about an hour while I waited for our friend - who was on his way over when he got a frantic request to stop at the grocery for canola oil - probably helped immensely in terms of flavor. The herbs had time to permeate the batter, and the onions mellowed.
I hope you all try making these sometime. They are truly divine. But, perhaps if you're socked in with winter should wait till spring or summer to make these on your grill's side burner or with your windows open. If you can.
½ lb fish (firm, like cod, haddock, perch, etc.)
1 small onion, very finely diced
3 cloves garlic, very finely diced
1 Tbsp hot sauce (or to taste)
1¼ cups flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 egg
½ cup milk
½ cup water
1 pat of room-temperature butter
¼ cup scallions (about 2-3), very finely diced
1 tsp each dried thyme, parsley, marjoram (or fresh if you’ve got it)
Freshly ground
pepper and salt, to taste
Gently poach the
fish.
While that’s cooking, make the Sauce Marie Rose, so it has time to sit.
Sauce Marie Rose
½ cup low-fat
mayonnaise
2 Tbsp tomato
ketchup
1 Tbsp fresh lime
juice
1 tsp sugar
Hot sauce, to
taste
Once the fish has
cooled enough to handle it, shred it into a large bowl. Add everything else and
whisk together. You may need to add more flour if you want to fry nice, rounded spoonfuls. I didn't mind that the batter was still a little loose and was rewarded with funky bumps and shapes.
Heat the oil to
375°. (Be sure you use oil with a smoke point that’s appropriate with deep
frying, like canola, vegetable, peanut or coconut.) Deep fry teaspoonfuls until
golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Serve them hot with Marie Rose Sauce or your
favorite condiment. Our friend tried them with ranch dressing and loved it!
The original recipe was made with Salt Fish, boiling it to no end to remove as much salt as possible - however, the salt helps the flavor. We didn't add enough back in. But - light and fluffy, not greasy. Yummy!
ReplyDeleteAn excellent point I forgot to mention - thanks, love!
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