Recipes | Quails with burnt miso butterscotch and pomegranate and walnut salsa

Recipes

Quails with burnt miso butterscotch and pomegranate and walnut salsa

As those of you who subscribe to the newsletter know we've been offering a signed copy of Yotam Ottolenghi and Ramael Scully's fabulous new book Nopi this month. Here's one of the recipes as a taster ...

Yotam writes: We went through a miso stage where the sweet, umami-rich white or brown paste found its way into every dish possible. Miso ice cream, miso dressings, miso soup. The inspiration for this particular incarnation was David Chang’s Lucky Peach magazine, which told of how pastry chef Christina Tosi used burnt miso in a banana pie that was so addictive itsoon went by the name Crack pie. The miso is cooked in the oven to the point where it turns almost caramel-like. After a bit of experimenting, we found it worked as well in a savoury dish as it did in its sweet incarnation.

De-boned chicken thighs also work well here, as an alternative to the quail.

Serves 8 as a starter, 4 as a main

150g white miso paste, at room temperature

50ml mirin

30g light brown sugar

2 tsp sherry vinegar

40g unsalted butter, at room temperature

2 tbsp sunflower oil

8 whole quails, de-boned with wing tips left on (1.1kg)

coarse sea salt and black pepper

Salsa

150g pomegranate seeds (seeds of 1 medium pomegranate)

70g walnuts, toasted and roughly chopped

35g pickled walnuts, rinsed, skin removed, finely chopped (optional)

2 tsp pomegranate molasses

2 tbsp Valdespino sherry vinegar (or another good-quality sherry vinegar)

1 tbsp olive oil

20g parsley, finely chopped

1 Preheat the oven to 160°C/140°C fan/gas mark 3.

2 Use a rubber spatula to spread the miso paste out thinly and evenly on a parchment-lined baking tray. Place the tray in the oven and roast for 20–25 minutes, until the miso has turned to dark caramel: the sides should look burnt and the middle a dark golden-brown. Remove from the oven and set aside to cool. Scrape the burnt miso paste off the parchment paper, breaking it as you go, and transfer the pieces to a food processor, along with the mirin, sugar, vinegar, butter and 1 tablespoon of water. Blitz well for 5 minutes to form a smooth aerated paste.

3 Place all the ingredients for the salsa, apart from the parsley, in a medium bowl with 1/4 teaspoon of salt and 3 tablespoons of water. Mix well and set aside until ready to use, stirring the parsley in just before serving.

4 When you are ready to serve, set the oven to its highest grill setting.

5 Place a large sauté pan on a high heat and add the oil. Season the quails with 1 teaspoon of salt and a good grind of pepper and, once the pan is hot, add them skin-side down in batches. Fry for 5 minutes, turning once, so that both sides get some colour. Transfer the quails to a parchment-lined baking tray and spread 1 tablespoon of miso butterscotch evenly over the skin of each bird. Place the tray under the grill and cook for 1–2 minutes, until the miso starts to bubble and caramelize. Serve at once, with the salsa spooned on top or alongside.

Extracted from NOPI: The Cookbook by Yotam Ottolenghi and Ramael Scully. (Ebury Press, £28) Photography by Jonathan Lovekin. You can eat the dishes for yourself at their restaurant Nopi just off Piccadilly Circus.

What to drink: Even Yotam Ottolenghi couldn't tell me what he'd drink with this dish and I haven't had a chance to make it yet but I'd personally go for a full, ripe red - probably a GSM (grenache/syrah/mourvèdre) or a graciano-based rioja. I feel sake should work too.

If you found this post helpful and would like to support the website which is free to use it would be great if you'd make a donation towards its running costs or sign up to my regular Substack newsletter Eat This, Drink That for extra benefits.

CONTRIBUTE HERE

Comments: 0 (Add)

Recent posts …

About FionaAbout FionaEvents and appearancesEvents and appearancesWork with meWork with me
Loading