Skip to main content

RECIPE: Halibut with Mixed Beans and Lemon Butter Sauce


On a recent trip to Surfas I purchased a bag of "Tongue of Fire" beans. These are a type of cranberry bean, or as they are known in Italian, borlotti beans. The beans are white, with swirls of red and they are very pretty. Despite the name, they are not spicy, which is kind of disappointing, but the beauty of beans is that you can MAKE them spicy if you want to.

The beans themselves have a nutty flavor, which is really good. I'm not so much of a bean fan, but I preferred these to other types of beans I have had. Cranberry beans grow fresh in the summer, i.e., now and are available dried throughout the rest of the year.

It just so happened that there was a recipe for a halibut dish utilizing cranberry beans in the September issue of Food and Wine. It's a pan-roasted halibut with the lemon butter sauce.



Recipe and wine pairing suggestions can be found HERE.

Things I would do differently next time are:

1. Soak the beans before cooking. They took forever to cook.

2. Turn up the heat a little when reducing the wine. That also took forever.

Other than the unanticipated length of time it took, the recipe came out great. The fish was really easy to do once the sauce was made and the the bean salad turned out nicely. Which is good--anything to get me to eat my vegetables! I think the sauce really makes it. The lemon provides some zest and the white wine provides that rich alcohol flavor that always tastes so good in a sauce.


Tags:

Comments

Jeremy said…
sounds awesome.

Quit making me hungry.
KT said…
No.

By the way, I have a coffee post coming up for you. Maybe sometime next week ...
Anyanka said…
I love the food setting.
Jeremy said…
can't wait!
Unknown said…
What beautiful pictures!
KT said…
A.S.: I don't believe you are the reigning pie contest champ anymore. I hope you are practicing your ice cream pie for this year. ;)

Garrett: Thanks! I'm trying to improve on my picture taking. I don't have a lot of beautiful settings in my apartment so my pix are not as fancy as some people's. But I'm working on it!

Popular posts from this blog

NEWS: Angeleno Magazine's Chef's Night Out

Brad A. Johnson of Angeleno magazine, and The Tasting Panel 's Anthony Dias Blue are co-hosting the annual Chef's Night Out and Restaurant Awards to honor local chefs and resterauteurs and to celebrate the release of Angeleno 's food issue. The dinner benefits the Children's Institute, an organization that works with children and families affected by violence, abuse, and trauma. Tickets are $150 for the event (food from the featured chefs with wine and spirits pairings), and $250 for VIP tickets which includes access to a special reception and the awards ceremony. The event will be held at the Fairmont Miramar Hotel and Bungalows this Sunday, July 26. The chefs at the event include: David Myers from Sona, Comme Ça and Pizza Ortica Lee Hefter and Thomas Boyce from Spago Lee Hefter and Ari Rosenson from Cut Susan Feniger from Street Anthony Zappola from Craft Brian Moyers from BLT Steak Ray Garcia from FIG Restaurant Santa Monica Warren Schwartz from Westside Tavern Evan

ABOUT THIS BLOG

I've been evaluating my blog and have realized that, while I have lots of nifty posts, I don't really have a good overall explanation of what exactly this blog is all about, and what one can expect to find here. So I'm creating this post and will link to it in the sidebar for anyone who's interested. I am not a professional chef. I have not been cooking for years. I am not an expert who is going to make beautiful and amazing and complicated dishes to "wow" you. I am, in fact, quite the opposite. I am a total beginner. I've always lived in places with miniscule kitchens and concerned myself with schoolwork and studying and working and not paid the least bit of attention to what I was eating every day. And that's what this blog is all about. It's about me learning where my food comes from, how to make it properly, and how to enjoy it to the utmost. It's no fun to learn by myself, so I started the blog to keep track of what I learn, kind of like a

LA.FOODBLOGGING: Groundworks Coffee

Our local foodblogging establishment, la.foodblogging , has seen fit to allow me to contribute. From now on most of my Los Angeles centered posts will be done there, and linked to from here, in order to avoid duplication. My first post is on my morningtime friend, Groundwork Coffee (as promised to Jeremy and my sweet Auntie). You can read it here: I'll Have the Works . Tags: LA.FOODBLOGGING