"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

#AdventCalendar Day 22: Seabass in Crust of Bread

Ingredients (serves 4 people):

  • a small seabass for each person (around 300 grams each);
  • olive oil;
  • white pepper;
  • 4 small oranges (remember what we said about bitter oranges when we baked Anne Boleyn’s favourite pie);
  • 3 spoonfuls of rosewater.

For the pastry:

  • 300 grams of flour;
  • 100 grams of butter;
  • two pinches of salt;
  • water.

Recipe:

Pour the flour on a wooden plank in the shape of a volcano, as usual, cut the butter in small pieces making sure you don’t warm it with your hands and add it to the flour with a pinch of salt and then slowly incorporate enough water to create a smooth and even dough. Let it rest in the fridge for about two hours.

Meanwhile, clean the fish by removing the innards and the scales, wipe them dry with a cloth and place them in a pan with olive oil, salt and pepper. Squeeze two of the oranges and water the fish with their juice, then cook them ten minutes on a lively fire until their skin has a golden shade.

On a work surface, roll out the dough with a rolling pin to a thickness of 2-3 millimetres and cut 4 pieces wide enough to wrap each fish. Make sure their tail peeks out of the pastry and leave an opening around the mouth. The more this wrapping looks like a fish, the better. Place the wrapped fish back in the pan with olive oil and the squeezed juice of the other two oranges. Bake them in the oven at a temperature of 180 °C for around half an hour until the dough is golden. When the cooking is done, sprinkle everything with the rosewater.

A similar recipe, without the dough, features orange and cinnamon: you can find it here.

books and literature

Lolly Willowes

Sylvia Townsend Warner is one of the most interesting literary figures of the 21st century, and Lolly Willowes is one of her finest works, even more stunning if you think it was her debut novel. Self-supporting, intellectually independent, and consistently sceptical of social and religious

Read More »
books and literature

Fugitive Telemetry

This is book #6 in the Murderbot series (yes, I accidentally skipped #5, I’m circling back to that), and I’m afraid I didn’t like this as much as the others. The whole investigation felt a bit rushed and, though the final twist is interesting in

Read More »
architecture, engineering and construction

The Discipline of Inspiration: Valéry and the Algorithmic Mind

Paul Valéry rejected inspiration as miracle, seeing creativity as the discipline of thought in motion. This week, we parallel his notion of mental “operations” with computational procedures in design: iteration, optimisation, constraint, and recombination, and challenge the dichotomy between intuition and automation. Drawing on contemporary

Read More »
Share on LinkedIn
Throw on Reddit
Roll on Tumblr
Mail it
1 Comment

Post A Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

RELATED POSTS

Lolly Willowes

Sylvia Townsend Warner is one of the most interesting literary figures of the 21st century, and Lolly Willowes is one of her finest works, even more stunning if you think it was her debut novel. Self-supporting, intellectually independent, and consistently sceptical of social and religious

Read More

Fugitive Telemetry

This is book #6 in the Murderbot series (yes, I accidentally skipped #5, I’m circling back to that), and I’m afraid I didn’t like this as much as the others. The whole investigation felt a bit rushed and, though the final twist is interesting in

Read More

The Discipline of Inspiration: Valéry and the Algorithmic Mind

Paul Valéry rejected inspiration as miracle, seeing creativity as the discipline of thought in motion. This week, we parallel his notion of mental “operations” with computational procedures in design: iteration, optimisation, constraint, and recombination, and challenge the dichotomy between intuition and automation. Drawing on contemporary

Read More