Swordfish With Skordalia (Ξιφίας Με σκορδαλιά)

Jan 5th, 2009 | By Peter Minakis | Category: Fish, Greek, Main, Olive Oil, Potato, Recipe, Salad

For the month of January, I’m trying to keep with some fit, clean, easy to prepare and healthy dishes. The month of December saw most of us indulging in food and alcohol, saying yes to another serving, another helping of dessert and perhaps one extra beverage.

My neighbors were over last week for coffee and an array of Christmas treats and it turns out they consumed FORTY POUNDS OF BUTTER. That’s alot of sweet and savory foods. Upon closer inspection of our grocery bills, we consumed a mere 25 pounds of butter…PHEW!

I’ll do my best to showcase some lighter fare for the month but I do still have a backlog of treats to post about but I can assure you that NO TOFU will appear on this blog for January or any other month.

Today’s subject is swordfish. It’s a fish that can convert the hardest of pescio-haters out there. Consider it the chicken breast of the sea, if you will. It usually comes in a fillet, very neutral in flavour, forgiving to cook and moderate in cost.

If you do find yourself enjoying swordfish, try & limit the consumption to once a month. Sadly, our oceans are also becoming a sewers and larger fish have higher levels of mercury in them. The higher the fish is in the food chain, the higher the mercury levels.

On to the fish dish. This recipe comes courtesy of The Australian Women’s Weekly Cookbooks and this dish comes from the Seafood installment. There must be dozens of these magazine-formatted magazines that offer quick, delicious recipes with photos for you folks that still like and read “pop-up” books like me!

So…there are three components to this dish: swordfish, skordalia and baby spinach. The sword fish, we’ve already discussed. The Skordalia, well it’s a puree of boiled potatoes that are mixed with pulverized garlic in a mortar & pestle. Skordalia is traditionally paired with fried codfish but the paring with the swordfish works wonderfully.

Some of you might be tempted to try and make this skordalia in your food processor – resist temptation unless you want a garlic paste fit for applying wall paper or having the mixture split on you.

The third and final component is baby spinach that’s wilted in some olive oil with a little bit of minced shallot, some mint and a bit of salt. Lay a bed of Skordalia on your plate, set your swordfish on top then crown everything with a mound of baby spinach and another dollop of skordalia.

Finally, the swordfish can be done on an outdoor grill or on one of those stovetop grilling pans. In either case, ensure the grilling surface is clean, lubricated with a vegetable oil (prevent sticking) and grilled over high heat.

Swordfish With Skordalia (Ξιφίας Με σκορδαλιά)
(serves 4)

4 swordfish steaks
sea salt

ground black pepper

extra virgin olive oil

2 Tbsp. olive oil

10 handfuls of baby spinach, rinsed

1 tsp. of fresh mint leaves

1 shallot, minced

Skordalia
3-4 large potatoes, boiled with skins on

4-5 cloves of garlic

1/2 cup olive oil

splash of wine vinegar or lemon juice

salt to taste

  1. Prepare your mise en place (organize all your ingredients). Boil your potatoes with the skins on in salted water (retain nutrients), rinse and dry your baby spinach and have your shallots and garlic peeled and ready for use. Ensure your swordfish fillets are brought back to room temperature before cooking.
  2. As soon as your potatoes are fork-tender, remove them from the boiling water and replace with cold water to bring the heat down to a safe handling temperature. Use the dull side of a knife to peel off the skins and set aside. Now add a little coarse salt and your garlic cloves and pound into a mash with your mortar and pestle. Now add the potatoes and a splash of vinegar and pound into a mash until the garlic and potatoes are incorporated. While stirring the mash, slowly add your olive oil into the potato mixture. Add in small stages until the warm potatoes have absorbed the oil. Continue until about 1/2 cup olive oil has been absorbed by the potatoes. Taste and adjust seasoning with salt.
  3. Grill your fish either on your pre-heated outdoor grill or indoor grilling pan. In both cases, high heat is required and your grilling surface should be clean. Rub some olive oil on your fillets and season with salt and pepper. Grill your sword fish fillets for about 2-3 minutes a side and keep warm.
  4. In a large skillet, add the olive oil and shallots and saute over medium heat for a minute. Add half of your spinach leaves and toss to coat with oil and to wilt for a couple of minutes. Turn the heat off and add the remaining spinach leaves and mint and continue to wilt the leaves for another couple of minutes. Season with some salt, toss and reserve.
  5. Divide the Skordalia evenly on each plate (reserve 4 Tbsp. to top each plate), place a fillet on top, followed by a mound of wilted spinach, then a small dollop of Skordalia over the spinach. Drizzle with extra-virgin olive oil and serve.

If you are not reading this post in a feed reader or at http://kalofagas.blogspot.com then the site you are reading is illegally publishing copyrighted material. Contact me. All recipes, text and photographs in this post are the original creations & property of the author. © 2007-2009 Peter Minakis

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55 Comments to “Swordfish With Skordalia (Ξιφίας Με σκορδαλιά)”

  1. Dragon says:

    Light and lovely, a winner.

  2. NikiTheo says:

    I am way to scared to sit down and figure out how much butter was used this holiday season. I am happy being ignorant….

    I love Skordalia and Swordfish, but I haven’t have srodfish in forever b/c of the high mercury content. I wouldn’t mind trying ti again… W/ a little spinach and skordalia.

    Although, I admit the idea of making it in the food processor crept into my mind… until you said no!

  3. Jeff says:

    I am think I maybe back in debt to you. I have been looking for a simple seafood dish to cook for the scary third date for a girl and this may have just won.

  4. [eatingclub] vancouver || js says:

    I’ve always wanted to do skordalia: this reminds me to get a move on it.

    Lovely seafood dish, as usual.

  5. Jeanne says:

    This looks just like what I feel like eating tonight! What a pity swordfish can’t be eaten in too often – I love it’s firm texture and the fact that you can pair it with robust flavours.

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