We are Up North at the moment and recently ate some of the
splendid fish and chips that is rife in the North East, my real man's piece of haddock was as big as his forearm and it is not a small arm
This got me thinking about various coatings for fried food~ here are nine good ones.
This is a very light coating which is not suitable for deep
frying and is suitable for delicate items. It's just plain flour with a little
seasoning. Turn a piece of fish or fish cake or whatever in the flour and
it should adhere to quite naturally Shallow fry and it will form a light crust as
in these fried green tomatoes.
~ Batters ~
Pin for later reference! |
2.
Flour &
Water Batter
This
is a light and crispy batter which absorbs little oil. It is important to
cook no further than a pale ivory
colour. Rest the batter for 30 minutes before using to allow the gluten
to relax or will shrink and expose the fish or whatever you have under it. This makes enough batter to coat 4 x 200g
fish for instance.
110g self-raising
flour
½ teaspoon salt
150 ml water
½ teaspoon salt
150 ml water
~ Sift together the
flour and salt (plus other seasonings if you wish).
~ Gradually whisk in the water to form a smooth batter.
~ Gradually whisk in the water to form a smooth batter.
This is even lighter if made with sparkling water. Which leads me, quite naturally, to ...
3. Beer Batter ~ a classic for Fish and Chips
A great tasting light and crispy
batter which is a classic for fish 'n' chips.
Replace the water in the above batter with beer, English
bitter is usual here but lager style beers work too.
Taking
this a step further ...
4. Yeast Batter
This batter has a pleasant slightly bready taste.
15ml warm water
1 x 7g sachet easy-blend dried yeast
225g plain flour
½ tsp salt
300ml beer
~ Stir the yeast into the water and set aside
somewhere warm for about 10 minutes till all foamy.
~ Stir the salt into the flour and make a
well.
~ Put the yeast mixture into the well and then gradually whisk in the beer to make a smooth pancake batter consistency. If too thick add a little water when you run out of beer.
~ Cover and set aside at room temperature till bubbly – about 30 mins.
~ Chill till needed.
~ Put the yeast mixture into the well and then gradually whisk in the beer to make a smooth pancake batter consistency. If too thick add a little water when you run out of beer.
~ Cover and set aside at room temperature till bubbly – about 30 mins.
~ Chill till needed.
5. Tempura Batter
Very light, good for delicates such as shrimp and
vegetables. This batter should be made at the last minute, just before using.
~ Sift together the
flour, cornflour and salt.
~ Whisk in the water till just combined – a few small lumps are OK!
~ As I said before – use immediately
~ Whisk in the water till just combined – a few small lumps are OK!
~ As I said before – use immediately
~ Dip the food to be
fried into the batter and then hold aloft to allow excess to drip off.
6. Cornmeal Batter
This make a pleasant gritty coating with shades of the Deep
South so flavour accordingly with Cajun seasoning or, if you can get it, Old Bay
Seasoning which is ubiquitous in the States and is especially good with seafood. Failing that a pinch of chilli
powder.
80g yellow cornmeal
60g plain flour
1/2 teaspoon baking
powder
½ tsp salt
½ tsp salt
1 beaten egg
120ml milk
~ Stir together the
dry ingredients.
~ Whisk in the wet ingredients to a smooth batter.
~ Whisk in the wet ingredients to a smooth batter.
~ Dry Coatings ~
To add a dry coating follow these guidelines ...
~ In addition to the
breadcrumbs or other coating have ready a dish of seasoned flour and a bowl of
egg beaten with a spoonful or two of water.
~ Make sure the item
to be coated is dry.
~ Coat said item in the flour, dip in the beaten egg and then coat with dry coating.
~ Coat said item in the flour, dip in the beaten egg and then coat with dry coating.
~ Set aside for a
few minutes for the coating to set a bit before frying.
An easy way to apply the dry coating is to have the crumbs
or cornmeal in a deep straight sided box. Drop the eggy item into it and shake
the box to coat. Lift it out and
continue with the next piece.
Mix
together equal quantities of yellow cornmeal and plain flour together with seasonings;
salt, black pepper and perhaps paprika and cayenne to taste. As this is a
recipe from the Deep South buttermilk is traditional instead of egg for
dipping.
8. Bread Crumbs
You could use the vibrantly coloured bought in crumbs or alternatively make
your own! You knew I’d say that.
~ Fresh Breadcrumbs
– run leftover bread through the food process or hand grate to crumbs.
~ Dry Breadcrumbs -
bake leftover bread at 300°F/150ºC/130ºC fan/gas 2 till completely dry. Cool
then process or crush to fine crumbs.
9. Japanese Bread Crumbs (Panko)
If
you are familiar with this blog you will know that I am very keen indeed on
these and use them in all sorts of unusual ways. They make a lovely thick crunchy coating for fried food - these are shallow fried slices of avocado.
SERIOUS WARNING – if perchance you don’t have a deep fryer and use a
saucepan make sure it is a deep one with straight sides and fill it no more
than a third. Some people say half full is OK but I don’t believe them!
Of course crispy coatings are a great way to make all sorts of leftovers delicious!
In Other News ...
~ I’m rather proud that "The Leftovers Handbook" and I have been mentioned in the May/June issue of Marks & Spencer’s Magazine
thus ...
... although I really wish
they’d got this blog’s name right, added a link and perhaps a picture of my
book. Still buggers can’t be choosers!
9 comments:
I've just been reading your piece in the M&S mag, yes I am THAT behind with my reading at the moment.
It's very good. I always do a 'whoop' when I spot someone I 'know' in a magazine, it makes Lovely Hubby jump in his chair, so then I am doubly delighted :-)
Thank you and so glad it made your Lovely Hubby jump!
Has anyone every tried farina as a coating like you would use cornmeal?
I've never even thought of using farina but I think it would be a good idea!
Only wanna say that this is very useful, Thanks for taking
your time to write this.
I could not resist commenting. Well written!
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Very interesting blog post, good job and thanks for sharing such a good blog.
Grossistes d’épicerie à Montréal
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