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Abalone recipes - Abalone in lemon sauce

 

Recipe Categories : | Abalone | All Seafood | MAIN INDEX |

Serves : 4


Ingredients :

  • 1 lb raw abalone steaks
  • 1 tspn cornstarch
  • ¾ cup cold water
  • 1 tspn grated lemon peel
  • 1 tspn fresh lemon juice
  • 1½ tspn sugar
  • ¼ tspn salt
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • flour
  • 2 cups vegetable oil


Preparation and Cooking Instructions :

  1. Heat the oil in a large frying pan until hot. Coat the steaks lightly with flour. Fry the steaks in oil until golden brown on both sides. Remove and blot excess oil on paper towels and keep warm.
  2. In a bowl, combine the water and cornstarch, and mix until well blended. Stir in the lemon peel, lemon juice, sugar and salt. Cook over medium heat until thickened, stirring constantly. Add the parsley and butter, stirring until the butter is melted. Pour this sauce over the abalone steaks.

Abalone: From Sea to Saucepan
Abalone: From Sea to Saucepan

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Fish & Shellfish by James Peterson

Editorial Reviews:
From Publishers Weekly:

Peterson (Sauces and Splendid Soups) has compiled a comprehensive, deftly organized guide to the preparation of seafood. The volume's four easily cross-referenced parts begin with cooking techniques and recipes in "Finfish" and "Shellfish." "Seafood in Other Guises" contains recipes for salads, soups, stews and such dishes as Ricotta and Sage Agnolini in Tomato Shrimp Broth and Salmon and Smoked Salmon Mousse Napoleons. "Finfish Dictionary" includes tips for identifying and cooking more than 200 species. The impressive range of Peterson's 150-plus recipes moves from the simple (Baked Mackerel with Mustard and Bread Crumbs) to the more challenging (Curry-Flavored Monkfish Croquettes with Pear Chutney) and includes the unusual (Arctic Char Baked in Salt; Indian-Style Sweet-and-Hot Seafood Chowder with Coconut Milk). Sidebars and boxes include tips for such things as taking the meat from lobster shells and buying scallops or seasoned vinegar for sushi. Charts for traditional ethnic dishes offer at-a-glance guides to ingredients, flavors, enrichers and garnishes. Peterson's authoritative, informal prose style blends well with the book's organization to make this volume a reference sure to please amateur and professional cooks. Also included are a glossary, source list and color photos.

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