Hot Smoked Mackerel with Poached Egg, Potatoes, Broad Beans & Herbs

Hot Smoked Mackerel with Poached Egg, Potatoes, Broad Beans & Herbs

Sandra Tate

This delightful meal was the result of 20 minutes cooking time.

Ingredients

50g sea salt

30g natural sugar

Serves 4

2 hot smoked mackerel

Small new potatoes (I allow 5 per person)

2 handfuls of broad beans

Butter

chopped flat leaf parsley and chives

salt and pepper

a tablespoon of white wine vinegar

4 eggs

Preparation

Isn't it a joy when you're generously given home-grown produce from friends and can bring it together with your own work, in this case my hot smoked mackerel? And a memorable meal is made

Hot smoked mackerel I made a few days ago, wrapped in kitchen parchment, it sat in the fridge until Fran arrived with a trug filled with her new potatoes, parsley, chives, broad beans, and more.

To add to that I always have a basket full of multi coloured eggs from Sandra's motley crew of special breed chickens.

This delightful meal was the result of 20 minutes cooking time.But first...

Curing & smoking mackerel:

I ask for my mackerel to be cleaned and heads removed - I like to hot smoke them whole rather than filleted, but have no need for a face on it.

For two large, very fresh mackerel I mixed a cure of 50g sea salt mixed with 30g natural sugar.

Rub this into the cavity and over the skin, drop them into a freezer bag or container and leave in the fridge for 30 minutes.

Now rinse well and dry completely inside and out with kitchen paper.

Set the Bradley Smoker to a cabinet temperature of 80°C/180°F and drop half a dozen Oak bisquettes into the stack.

Have the cabinet up to temperature and full of smoke before placing the fish in on a wire rack. I leave the top vent open for light smoking and the fish should be ready after an hour.

Test for internal temp of 72°C if your not sure they're ready.

Allow to cool completely and refrigerate if you're not using immediately.

Serves 4

Carefully remove the 4 fillets from 2 hot smoked mackerel, removing the pin bones with tweezers, lay on a sheet of foil and set aside.

Boil small new potatoes (I allow 5 per person, you decide according to your appetites) until almost tender when tested with a skewer.

Now add 2 handfuls of broad beans and cook for a further 2-3 minutes then drain and add a good knob of butter.

Crush lightly with the back of a fork and scatter in a handful of chopped flat leaf parsley and chives.

Season with salt and pepper.

Place the mackerel fillets under a hot grill and cook 2-3 minutes each side.

As the mackerel cooks, bring 6cm water to the boil in a pan with a tablespoon of white wine vinegar, once you have a rolling boil crack in 4 eggs and poach for a scant 2 minutes then remove on a slotted spoon and stand on kitchen paper.

Divide herbs, beans and potato mix between 4 plates, top each with a sizzling mackerel fillet and a poached egg.

So simple, so very good!

Oak
Wood

Oak Bisquettes for Bradley Smokers

The most versatile wood of them all is Oak. Pairs especially well with poultry, beef, pork, lamb, and game.

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