Recipe

Shutome (Hawaiian Swordfish) with Pomelo à la Poisson Cru

Community Pick!

Shutome (Hawaiian Swordfish) with Pomelo à la Poisson Cru

Photo by gingerroot

  • This recipe was entered in the contest for Your Best Swordfish Recipe
  • A&M's Testing Notes: This is a dish that I once enjoyed a version of in French Tahiti so I was delighted to try this recipe. The lemon, lime and grapefruit cooks the fish into tender morsels. The sriracha adds...

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  • Chef

    gingerroot's Notes: I don’t eat top-of-the-food-chain fish very often although a recent dinner celebrating my husband’s birthday started with the Chef’s take on Tahitian Poisson Cru; the clean, sweet flavors...

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Serves 8-10 as a starter

1 1/4 lb. wild Shutome fillet (or other sustainably caught Swordfish), cut thinly into 1/4-inch thick squares Ask a question about this ingredient

1/2 cup pomelo juice Ask a question about this ingredient

1/4 cup lime juice Ask a question about this ingredient

1/4 cup meyer lemon juice Ask a question about this ingredient

1 small sweet onion, thinly sliced with a mandoline or sharp knife Ask a question about this ingredient

2 teaspoons coriander seeds, toasted and crushed (I used the back of a Tablespoon) Ask a question about this ingredient

1 teaspoon sriracha (chili-garlic sauce) Ask a question about this ingredient

Scant 1 cup mixed cherry tomatoes, seeded and slivered Ask a question about this ingredient

Scant 1 cup baby carrot ribbons (I used my vegetable peeler) Ask a question about this ingredient

1 teaspoon salt Ask a question about this ingredient

1 teaspoon sugar (plus more to taste if using grapefruit) Ask a question about this ingredient

3/4 cups pomelo flesh, pith and membrane removed, segments separated Ask a question about this ingredient

3/4 cups coconut cream (be sure to shake can well before using, or alternatively, empty contents into a bowl, stir well and then add to fish mixture) Ask a question about this ingredient

  1. Place fish pieces in a large non-reactive bowl. Add thinly sliced onion, pomelo juice, lime juice and lemon juice, making sure the fish is completely submerged in citrus juice. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate at least six hours (opaque except for the very center) or overnight (completely opaque) depending on your preference. When fish is “cooked” to your liking, carefully drain out all but a quarter cup or so of the citrus juice (in other words all the juice that is easily drained without dropping any fish in the sink).

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  2. Add toasted, crushed coriander seeds and sriracha to fish, stirring to combine. At this point, I was still many hours away from serving this dish so I re-covered the bowl with plastic wrap and returned it to the refrigerator to allow the flavors to develop.

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  3. When you are ready to serve, carefully fold in the slivered cherry tomatoes, carrot ribbons, salt, sugar and pomelo flesh. If using grapefruit, add more sugar to taste (in my experience, pomelo is a bit sweeter than grapefruit). Pour coconut cream over the mixture and stir to combine. Transfer Poisson Cru to serving bowl. You can place the serving bowl in a larger bowl filled with ice water to ensure it is chilled when eaten. Enjoy.

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4 Comments on Shutome (Hawaiian Swordfish) with Pomelo à la Poisson Cru

186003_1004761561_1198459_n Reply

I am so glad that I am making this as an editor's pick....it sounds delicious. My local grocery ONLY will carry Hawaiian swordfish. I haven't cooked swordfish in years...looking forward to it.

Img_1958 Reply

I am so glad you will be testing it too! Although swordfish is quite meaty, I think this preparation and combination of ingredients makes the final dish light and refreshing.

Dsc_0382 Reply

This sounds very interesting and different. I'm saving and will try soon.

Img_1958 Reply

Let me know what you think - I went with Southeast Asian flavors (coriander, coconut, pomelo, sriracha) and they worked well together.

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