Dukkah Crusted Salmon

Julie Goodwin's recipe for Dukkah Crusted Salmon

Serves:

4

Preparation Time:

15 Minutes

Cooking Time:

10 minutes

Ingredients

1/3 cup roasted salted almonds
1/3 cup sesame seeds
2 tablespoons coriander seeds
2 tablespoons cumin seeds
12 white peppercorns
¼ teaspoon ground hot chillies (optional)
¼ teaspoon salt
4 x 180 g boneless salmon fillets, skin on
1 tablespoon olive oil

Method

  1. Place almonds in the bowl of a food processor and process until mostly about the size of sesame seeds. There will be some bigger pieces and some powder, this is ok. Heat a large non-stick frypan or chef’s pan over medium-high heat and dry-roast the almonds until golden and aromatic. Remove to a bowl. Place the sesame seeds in the hot pan and toast until golden, then remove to the bowl.
  2. Place the coriander seeds, cumin seeds and peppercorns into the pan and toast until starting to colour, and aromatic. Place into the bowl of the processor and process to a coarse powder. Place in the bowl with the almonds and sesame seeds, and add the chilli. Taste and add salt if required – this will depend on how salty the almonds are. Mix well.
  3. Put half of the dukkah mixture in a shallow dish. Press the top (skinless) side of the salmon firmly into the mixture.
  4. Wipe out the frypan and add the olive oil. Heat to a medium-high heat and place the fish skin-side down in the pan. Leave for 3-4 minutes, or until you can see the fish turning opaque from the bottom to about ¼ of the way up. Carefully turn the salmon over and cook for a further 2-3 minutes, ot until the dukkah is golden and the fish has cooked through to your liking.
  5. Serve with a couscous salad or steamed chat potatoes, lemon wedges and steamed greens.

Note: Store-bought dukkah can be used if you prefer. This recipe makes about ¾ cup – whatever you don’t use for the salmon can be stored in an airtight container and eaten with bread and olive oil.

More Recipes

No-bake choc cheesecake

No-bake Choc Cheesecake

This is an embarrassingly huge cheesecake, and is very rich as well, so it may not all get eaten in one sitting. The good news is, it freezes well, and can even be eaten semi-frozen if you can’t wait!

View Recipe →