Jason Atherton 

Jason Atherton: pudding recipes and fish recipes

The Pollen Street Social chef's desserts – and a few fish dishes too
  
  


MICRO BLACK FOREST SUNDAE

MAKES APPROXIMATELY 5 GLASSES

For the cherry purée

pitted cherries 1 kg

caster sugar 150g

water 200ml

For the cherry jelly

cherry purée about 500ml

water 10g

stock syrup (see recipe on following page) 125ml

gelatine 28g

For the marquise

70% chocolate 37g

butter 12g

sugar 14g

eggs 2 large

egg yolk 25g

double cream 46g

For the cherry granita

cherry purée about 500ml

stock syrup (see recipe on following page) 100ml

sparkling water 500ml

Basic stock syrup

caster sugar 150g

water 300ml

lemon zest 2 strips

First make the cherry purée. Melt the sugar into the water in a pan over a low heat. Add the cherries and cook for 15 minutes over a medium heat. Blend in a blender till smooth, pass through a sieve and cook down in a pan till thick, around 20 minutes.

Make the stock syrup (also use this for the orange sorbet on page 51.) This will make about 500ml of syrup, but any surplus can be kept in a sealed container in the fridge for up to three weeks and used to dress any type of summer fruit or salad.

Put the sugar and water in a small, heavy-based pan and heat gently until the sugar has dissolved. Add the lemon zest and bring to the boil for 5 minutes. Allow to cool, then strain and transfer to a glass container with a lid, and place in the fridge until required.

To make the cherry jelly, pass the cherry purée through a fine chinois sieve – make up to 2 litres with the water. Add more if necessary. Add the stock syrup. Take a small portion of the liquid and warm, melt in the gelatine and add back to the mix. Stir.

To make the marquise, melt together the chocolate and butter. In another pan, boil the sugar with a little water to a soft ball and pour over the whisking eggs to make a pâté bomb. When the pâté bomb is cool, fold into the melted chocolate and butter. Mix in the cream. Set aside.

To make the cherry granita, pass the cherry purée through a fine chinois. Add the stock syrup. Mix well. Gently stir in the sparkling water and try not to lose all the bubbles. Freeze in a plastic container until solid.

To plate, put the marquise into glasses then top with the cherry jelly, then with the granita.

TANGERINE AND HONEY TART WITH ALMOND MILK SORBET

SERVES 6-8

For the sweet pastry:

plain flour 250g

icing sugar 50g

cold butter 125g, diced

lemon zest of ½

large egg 1, beaten

milk a splash

For the heather honey cream:

good double cream 300ml

buttermilk 6 tbsp

heather honey 4 tbsp

For the almond milk sorbet:

water 80ml

whole milk 320ml

sugar 80g

ground almonds 100g

To serve:

20 tangerine segments, icing sugar, chopped pistachios, chopped mint

Mix all the ingredients together either by hand or in a food processor and knead until smooth, then let rest in the fridge until cold. Roll out into small individual tart rings, about 3in, fill with baking beans and bake at 160C/gas mark 3 for 15 minutes. Take out the baking beans and brush with beaten egg and bake for 3-5 minutes until hard.

To make the heather honey cream, whisk together all the ingredients and set in the fridge. To make the almond milk sorbet, simmer the ingredients for 20 minutes on mid heat on the hob, then chill overnight or a minimum of 2 hours, then pass through a sieve and churn in an ice-cream maker.

To serve, fill the pastry cases with the honey cream, then place the tangerine segments on top. Cover with icing sugar and blow torch till caramelised and sprinkle with pistachios and mint. Serve with the almond milk sorbet.

BEETROOT AND BLOOD ORANGE SORBET

SERVES 4-6

For the beetroot purée:

beetroot 1kg, washed and chopped

sugar 75g

thyme 3 sprigs

water to cover

For the sorbet:

beetroot purée 500g

blood orange purée (see below) 250g

glucose 50g

stock syrup (see recipe above) 100ml

lemon juice to taste

For the beetroot jelly:

beetroot reduction 500ml

stock syrup (see recipe above) 250ml

bronze leaf gelatine 4 leaves

For the yoghurt snow:

200g natural yoghurt 200g

Granny Smith apple 1

To make the beetroot purée, boil the beetroot until cooked – keep immersed and reduce water down until not quite dry. Blitz in a blender and sieve.

To make the orange purée, blend segments of blood orange with syrup.

To make the blood orange sorbet, combine all the ingredients in a bowl, then churn in an ice-cream maker. Or use a plastic container, whisking it regularly.

To make the jelly, mix together the beetroot reduction and syrup, melt the gelatine leaf into the mixture, pour into a container and leave to set in the fridge.

To make the yoghurt snow, place yoghurt in a bag and freeze. Grate with a Microplane on to a frozen tray. Make a salad of apples, sliced thinly, and cover in lemon juice to prevent browning.

To plate, place the sliced apple on to the plate, then a quenelle of sorbet and pieces of beetroot jelly. Powder the snow over the top and serve.

HALIBUT WITH CHESTNUTS, CAPERS AND BEURRE NOISETTE

SERVES 2

halibut fillets 2

garlic cloves 3, crushed

bay leaf 2 sprigs

thyme 3 sprigs

butter 60g

chestnuts 8, chopped

lemon segments 2 tbsp, chopped

small capers 2 tbsp, chopped

shallots 2 tbsp, chopped

sprout tops 8, blanched and refreshed

parsley 2 tbsp, chopped

fish brown sauce (see below) 100ml

To make the fish sauce, heat oven to 180C/gas mark 4 and roast the halibut bones in a roasting tin with shallots and garlic. Pour into a large heavy-based pan, cover with chicken stock and fresh herbs, simmer for 10-15 minutes, pass through a sieve and reduce by half. Thicken with butter at the end.

Put a little oil in a non-stick pan then add the fish and crushed garlic and bay and thyme. When coloured on one side, turn over and add 30g butter. When it starts to foam and the fish is cooked, take out the fillets and let rest. Then add the rest of the butter, and when it starts to foam add the chestnuts, then the lemon, capers and shallots.

Cook for a few minutes then add the sprout tops and parsley and season with sea salt. Put the fish on to a plate and pour over the fish sauce and add the garnish.

TUNA FISH, SMOKED ANCHOVIES AND HERITAGE TOMATO SALAD

SERVES 4

bright red tuna portion 400g, cut into 4

plum tomatoes 2

cherry red tomatoes 4, sliced

green cherry tomatoes 4, sliced

black cherry tomatoes 4, sliced

smoked anchovy fillets 10

bonito 100g, sliced

baby shallots 3, sliced

baby basil leaves, sea purslane and wild oyster leaves a few per person, to garnish

For the ketchup:

Forum vinegar 25g

sugar 25g

ripe tomatoes 100g

fresh chopped tomato 50g

For the spice oil:

virgin oil 50ml

black pepper 1g

Jamaican pepper 1g

1 chilli

To make the tomato ketchup, cook all of the ingredients together for 10 minutes in a saucepan, then blend and season.

To make the spice oil, warm together the oil with the black pepper, Jamaican pepper, chilli and salt to taste.

Sear the tuna in a grill pan on the hob until pink, about 30 seconds each side, then rest for 5 minutes. Spread ketchup on a plate, cut the tuna in half and place on the plate with the sliced tomatoes, smoked anchovies and bonito. Garnish with shallots, the spice oil and fresh herbs.

RED MULLET WITH SARDINE ON TOAST AND TAPENADE

SERVES 4

red mullet fillets (pin-boned) 4,

120g-140g each

sourdough 8 slices, thinly sliced

extra virgin olive oil 100ml

sea purslane (blanched) 50g

For the sardine and tomato sauce:

olive oil 30ml

garlic cloves 2, chopped

shallot 1, sliced

sherry vinegar 1 tbsp

tinned sardines in tomato sauce 2 x 125g

tinned tomatoes 4, chopped

sprig of thyme 1, leaves only

For the tapenade:

pitted black olives 100g

anchovies in olive oil, drained 25g

capers 10g

olive oil to blend

To make the sauce, heat a little oil and sweat the garlic and shallot till tender. Then deglaze with the vinegar and add the sardines and tomatoes and thyme leaves and cook for 10 minutes. Blend then pass through a chinois and cook again till the sauce has a smooth texture, around 15 minutes. Add a little more olive oil to taste and season.

To make the tapenade, blend all of the tapenade ingredients; chill.

To serve the dish, toast the sourdough and then spread the tapenade over the top. Pan-fry the red mullet and season with salt and lemon juice. Put the red mullet on top of the toast and then on the plate. Drizzle over the sardine sauce and garnish with blanched sea purslane.

CONFIT SMOKED SALMON AND HORSERADISH SNOW

MAKES 4 PORTIONS

For the salmon:

London cure salmon pavés 4, 45-50g, chill until needed

olive oil 500ml

rye crispbreads 2 per person

baby watercress

new potatoes cooked in duck fat 1 per person, sliced

For the avocado purée:

avocado 1, peeled

lime juice of ½

creme fraiche 1 tsp

For the horseradish snow:

fresh horseradish 45g

milk 5 tbsp

double cream 5 tbsp

corn starch 12g

buttermilk 500ml

To serve:

pickled cucumber cucumber sliced, add to 2 tbsp white wine vinegar, sugar and mirin

Mix the avocado flesh with the lime juice and creme fraiche. Purée in a blender. Pass through muslin; season with salt to taste.

To make the horseradish snow, blitz the fresh horseradish in a vegetable juicer and keep the juice. Combine the milk and cream and heat, then thicken with the corn starch, add the buttermilk and the horseradish juice, season and cool.

Freeze the liquid into Pacojet containers to -18C and blitz in the machine a little bit at a time. Reserve in the freezer until needed.

To cook the salmon confit-style, immerse the salmon in a heavy bottomed pan of warm olive oil and cook on a low heat (65 degrees) for 8-10 minutes and remove shortly before serving.

Put salmon on the plate with sliced potato and cucumber, then garnish with watercress and horseradish snow. Slice crispbread into crouton-sized pieces and dot over salmon.

 

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