For the poaching liquor
2 litres/3½ pints red wine
2 sprigs of thyme
½ bay leaf
1 garlic clove, peeled
½ tsp salt
For the turbot
6 thick turbot fillets, each 125-150g/4½-5½oz, skinned
salt and freshly ground black pepper
18 small sprigs of lovage, or very fine flat-leaf parsley to garnish
For the pickled baby beetroot
9 raw baby beetroot
1 tsp demerara sugar
4 tsp balsamic vinegar
pinch salt
For the artichoke purée
25g/1oz unsalted butter
500g/1lb 2oz Jerusalem artichokes, peeled and very finely sliced
pinch salt
2 sprigs thyme
½ bay leaf
1 garlic clove, peeled
50ml/2fl oz double cream
salt and freshly ground black pepper
Method
For the poaching liquor, pour the wine into a large saucepan and add the thyme, bay leaf, garlic clove and salt. Boil over a medium-high heat until reduced to 750ml/1¼ pints.
Strain the mixture through a fine sieve, preferably lined with muslin, into a large wide pan and set aside.
To make the pickled baby beets, peel the beetroots with a small, sharp knife or a very fine potato peeler, then place in a pan with 150ml/¼ pint of water, the sugar, balsamic vinegar and a pinch of salt. Bring just to the boil. Cover and simmer for 8-10 minutes or until tender. Remove the beetroots. Pass the cooking liquid through a fine sieve, then return to the pan and reduce to a glaze over a medium heat. Cut the beetroots in half and add to the glaze. Set aside.
Next, make the artichoke purpurée. Melt the butter in a heavy pan. Add the artichokes, season with a pinch of salt and add the thyme, bay leaf and garlic clove. Stir well. Cover with a sheet of greaseproof paper and sweat the artichokes for 10-15 minutes or until they are very soft. Stir regularly during cooking, and add a little water if they start to colour. Add the cream and boil for three minutes, then remove the thyme, bay leaf and garlic. Purpurée the artichokes in a blender until silky smooth. Add salt and freshly ground black pepper
to taste and keep warm.
Bring the poaching liquor to the boil, then remove from the heat. Carefully lower in the fish fillets, making sure they are submerged in a single layer and not sitting on top of each other. Leave the turbot off the heat like this for 7-8 minutes or until the fish is just cooked through, only returning the pan to a low heat if the liquor cools down too much before the fish is cooked.
While the fish is cooking, gently reheat the pickled baby beetroot and the artichoke purpurée. When the fish is cooked, remove it very gently from the poaching liquor using a fish slice and drain on kitchen paper. Season each fillet with a pinch of sea salt.
To serve, place a piece of fish on each plate and garnish with a neat spoonful of artichoke purpurée and beetroot halves. Drizzle a little of the beetroot glaze around the fish, and garnish with the lovage or parsley.
About the author
Marcus Wareing from Great British Menu
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