Cockle & Smoked Coley Chowder
Easy
Niall Sabongi’s chowder is light, refreshing and hearty without being thick and gloopy. It is super fast to put together and can be rustled together in minutes for a light supper or starter. You can use smoked or non smoked fish and can sub mussels for anything that takes your fancy at the fishmonger’s slab. Watch the video here
PREP IN
20 MIN
COOK IN
30 MIN
SERVE
4-6
Cockle & Smoked Coley Chowder
Easy
PREP IN
20 MIN
COOK IN
30 MIN
SERVE
4-6
Introduction
Niall Sabongi’s chowder is light, refreshing and hearty without being thick and gloopy. It is super fast to put together and can be rustled together in minutes for a light supper or starter. You can use smoked or non smoked fish and can sub mussels for anything that takes your fancy at the
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Ingredients
- 85g butter
- Splash of rapeseed oil or an alternative oil
- 1 large shallot, chopped
- 1 celery stick, peeled and chopped
- 1/2 fennel bulb, chopped
- 1 leek cut into 2.5cm slices well rinsed
- 12 baby potatoes, washed and quartered
- 400ml full fat milk
- 2 bay leaves
- Small shallot, studded with 6 cloves
- 200g smoked coley, skin removed
- 24 large cockles, rinsed
- Handful of chervil leaves
- Garnish with crushed up garlic and lemon zest croutons (see end of recipe)
Method
- 1. Melt 30g of the butter with a splash of oil in a large saucepan, Add the shallot, celery, fennel, leek and potatoes and cook over a medium heat for 15 minutes until everything has softened slightly.
- 2. Pour over 200ml water, bring to the boil then turn down to a simmer.
- 3. Pour the milk into a wide saucepan and add the bay leaves and studded shallot. Bring to the boil then turn down to a simmer.
- 4. Add the coley fillet whole and with skin on to the milk. Paoch for 5 minutes or until the fish is just cooked. Take off the heat and remove the skin from the fish and pull into large flakes. put fish to one side and retain the milk.
- 5. To the simmering vegetables add your cockles and turn the heat up. Cover with a lid and cook for 2-3 minutes or until the cockles are open. Take off the heat and discard 50% of the cockle shells and any unopened ones you might have, retain the meat. Pour in the retained milk and bring back to the boil for 2 minutes.
- 6. Add remaining 55g butter and stir gently. This will help thicken the chowder slightly.
- 7. Add the flaked fish and cockle meat then season well.
- 8. Let sit for 2 minutes so the fish warms through but don't over stir so the flakes stay big.
- 9. Stir in chervil leaves and serve in warm deep bowls. Top with crushed up garlic and lemon zest croutons (recipe below). Add another little fresh zest of lemon and serve immediately.
- 10. For the croutons, start by making a garlic oil. Smash 4 cloves of garlic with sea salt and flat knife. Place in small bowl then cover with rapeseed oil and allow to infuse.
- 11. While oil infuses, take one baguette and cut off and discard all the crust. Cut into 2.5cm cubes. Spread out on a baking tray in a single layer.
- 12. Drizzle with a little rapeseed oil and then season with fresh cracked white pepper and flaked Irish Sea Salt.
- 13. Place in low oven for 20 minutes or until golden and very hard (no soft centres)
- 14. Once out of the oven and still warm, drizzle with some garlic oil and add some lemon zest. Allow to cool.
- 15. Will keep well in air tight container out of the fridge for up to one week.