Baked salmon 'Tarator' style recipe

- Cuisine: Lebanese
- Prep Time: 20 min(s)
- Cook Time: 55 min(s)
- Serves 10–12
This is one of the best dishes I’ve eaten in my life and is now our show-off dinner party and Christmas lunch dish. The combination of perfectly cooked fish, a tahini and yoghurt dressing, freshly chopped herbs and walnuts, and a hint of chilli is fresh and delicious. The dish is served at room temperature, so you can cook the salmon up to four hours in advance.
Ingredients
Dressing1 garlic clove
1 tsp sea salt
400 g natural yoghurt
100 ml tahini
lemon juice
1 Tasmanian salmon (4–4.5 kg)
sea salt and freshly ground white pepper
170 ml extra-virgin olive oil
150 g walnuts
juice of 1–2 lemons
1 medium red onion, finely diced
3 long red chillies, seeded and finely diced
2 cups coriander leaves, chopped
½ cup mint leaves, shredded
20 g sumac
Preparation
To make the dressing, place the garlic and salt in a mortar and crush well. Stir the garlic, yoghurt and tahini together until it becomes a thick paste. Thin slightly with lemon juice (it should be the consistency of pure cream). Taste for salt and refrigerate.Preheat the oven to 150°C. Place the salmon on a large sheet of baking paper. Season all over with salt and pepper and drizzle with 2 ½ tablespoons of the oil. Wrap the salmon in the paper, place on a tray and bake in the centre of the oven for 25 minutes. Gently turn the salmon over and cook for a further 25 minutes, by which time it should be medium–rare. Remove from the oven and open the paper to stop the salmon cooking further. Leave to cool to room temperature.
Turn the oven up to 200°C and roast the walnuts for 5 minutes. Remove from the oven and rub briskly in a clean tea towel to remove as much of their skin as possible. Chop finely and set aside.
Close to serving time, use a sharp knife to cut through the skin along the back of the salmon from head to tail. Peel away the skin from one side. Scrape away the thin layer of grey flesh (the blood line) to expose the pink flesh underneath. Carefully transfer the salmon to a large serving plate. Brush ½ cup of the yoghurt dressing over the top of the salmon.
In a bowl, whisk the remaining oil with the lemon juice, salt and pepper. Add the onion and chilli and whisk lightly. Add the chopped walnuts, herbs and sumac. Spoon the salad over the salmon, covering it as neatly as possible.
Use a metal spoon to ‘cut’ portions of the salmon and salad. Serve with the remaining dressing.
SBS cook’s notes
Oven temperatures are for conventional; if using fan-forced (convection), reduce the temperature by 20˚C. | We use Australian tablespoons and cups: 1 teaspoon equals 5 ml; 1 tablespoon equals 20 ml; 1 cup equals 250 ml. | All herbs are fresh (unless specified) and cups are lightly packed. | All vegetables are medium size and peeled, unless specified. | All eggs are 55–60 g, unless specified.
If you enjoyed this Baked salmon 'Tarator' style recipe then browse more Lebanese recipes, seafood recipes, baking recipes and our most popular hainanese chicken rice recipe.
Lebanese Restaurants
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| Restaurant | Book Online | Suburb | |
| 1. | El Bahsa | Newtown | |
| 2. | No No's | Red Hill | |
| 3. | Abla's | Carlton | |
| 4. | Almazett | Caulfield North | |
| 5. | Dunyazad | Balwyn North | |
| 6. | Kanzaman | Richmond | |
| 7. | Samsara | Mt Waverley | |
| 8. | Summerland | Bankstown | |
| 9. | Almustafa | Glebe | |
| 10. | El-Manara Lebanese Restaurant | Lakemba |
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Avoiding sticky pasta
To avoid sticky pasta cook in a large pot of rapidly boiling salted water (5 to 6 litres of water to every 500 grams of pasta). Giving the pasta a good stir in the first couple of minutes is also crucial to help avoid sticking.
Glossary
Tahini
A paste or butter obtained from grinding sesame seeds. Used in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cooking, often to thicken hommos or other dips but also as a sweet filling in cakes and pastries.


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