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Monday, March 18, 2024
March 18, 2024

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A trout recipe worth touting

You need this one-pan approach to getting dinner done fast

The Columbian
Published:
3 Photos
Baked steelhead trout with asparagus, potatoes and herbs
Baked steelhead trout with asparagus, potatoes and herbs Photo Gallery

As kitchen wisdom goes, I often think the best tricks are the simplest. One-pan cooking, for example. The ability to cook an entire meal on a single rimmed sheet pan — an act that leaves you with nothing but that one pan to clean when dinner’s over — to me is nothing short of magic.

And the secret to making it work really is just a matter of organizing the order in which each ingredient lands on the baking sheet to ensure each gets neither too little nor too much time in the oven. And this recipe for baked steelhead trout with asparagus and potatoes will show you just how easy that is.

We start by seasoning all the parts individually at the beginning of the cooking process, not the end. If you wait until the end, the salt won’t do its job, which isn’t only to contribute saltiness, but to enhance the flavor of the ingredient to which it’s added. In practice, salt doesn’t so much amplify flavor as tamp down bitterness, thus allowing a food’s other flavors — notably its sweetness or sourness — to shine.

First in the oven is the asparagus so that it can be properly cooked and lightly browned all by itself and without crowding. Any time you want to brown a vegetable in the oven, you must make sure to spread it out across the pan in a single layer. Then the asparagus takes a break and the potatoes go in. Finally the fish comes into play. Lay it right on top of the now-browned potatoes and bake it until tender on the oven’s middle shelf.

How do you know when the fish is done? When a knife slides in with little resistance, the fish is good to go.

Butter and herbs are this recipe’s crowning touch. The hot fish melts the butter, creating a kind of instant sauce. Simple, right? Delicious, too. And just one pan to clean up. Now that’s my kind of meal.

Baked Steelhead Trout With Asparagus, Potatoes and Herbs

Start to finish: 50 minutes (30 minutes active). Servings: 4.

1 1/2 bunches asparagus (about 1 1/2 pounds), tough ends discarded and stems peeled if thicker than 1/3 inch

2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided

Salt and ground black pepper

1 1/4 pounds Yukon Gold or large boiling potatoes, sliced crosswise 1/4 inch thick (leave the skins on)

1 1/2 pounds skinned steelhead trout, divided into 4 portions

1 tablespoon lemon juice

2 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into thin slices

1/4 cup chopped fresh herbs, such as dill, chives, tarragon, basil or a mix

Heat the oven to 450 degrees. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil.

On the prepared baking sheet, toss the asparagus with 2 teaspoons of the oil and a generous pinch each of salt and pepper. Spread the asparagus in an even layer. Bake on the oven’s top rack until starting to brown and are crisp-tender, about 7 minutes for thicker asparagus, 3 minutes for thin asparagus. Transfer to a plate and set aside.

On the baking sheet, toss the potatoes with another 2 teaspoons of the oil and a generous pinch each of salt and pepper. Spread the potatoes in an even layer. Bake on the oven’s top rack until barely golden, 8 to 10 minutes. Remove the pan from the oven and reduce the temperature to 400 degrees.

Arrange the fish pieces in one layer on top of the potatoes, sprinkle them with the lemon juice, drizzle with the remaining 2 teaspoons of oil, then season with salt and pepper. Set the pan on the oven’s middle shelf and bake for 5 minutes. Add the asparagus to the sheet pan and bake another 2 to 3 minutes, or until the fish is just cooked through.

Transfer the fish to 4 serving plates and top each portion with a few slices of butter. Transfer a quarter of the potatoes and asparagus to each of the plates, then sprinkle the herbs over each serving.

Nutrition information per serving: 470 calories; 220 calories from fat (47 percent of total calories); 24 g fat (7 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 100 mg cholesterol; 30 g carbohydrate; 6 g fiber; 6 g sugar; 36 g protein; 430 mg sodium.

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