Composition / ingredients
Step-by-step cooking
Step 1:
Prepare all the necessary ingredients specified in the recipe. A fillet of pollock or a whole carcass will do. If you take a whole one, increase its weight to 800 grams. If necessary, defrost the fish, but not completely. Put it on the bottom shelf of the refrigerator and bring it to a slightly defrosted state, so it will be easier to cut it. The pieces will be more accurate and will not turn into a shapeless mass when sliced.
Step 2:
Peel the onion from the husk and cut into thin half rings. To prevent onion juice from irritating the mucous membrane of the eyes so much, before slicing, rinse the knife and onion under cold running water.
Step 3:
Brush the carrot well and clean it. Grate it on a large grater or cut it into strips. Remember, the final result in this dish depends on how you chop the carrots. Grated carrots will turn into mush during heat treatment and mix evenly with the rest of the ingredients, and cut into strips or cubes will retain its shape.
Step 4:
Clean the whole fish. To do this, remove the head, fins and tail. Cut the abdomen, gut it, remove the black film from the inside, as it is bitter and will spoil the taste. Rinse and be sure to dry with paper towels. Cut into arbitrary pieces.
Step 5:
A saucepan or saucepan with a thick bottom is suitable for cooking this dish, but you can also cook in a deep frying pan.
Step 6:
Pour refined vegetable oil on the bottom, put half onion rings on top.
Step 7:
Put the carrot in the next layer.
Step 8:
Place some of the fish slices on a vegetable pillow.
Step 9:
Alternate layers in the same sequence: onion, then carrot.
Step 10:
Next - pieces of pollock.
Step 11:
We have to finish with onions and carrots. Now add a little boiled warm water – you don't need much, because the fish will later let the juice, we just need it to start boiling.
Step 12:
Put spices on top: according to the classics of the genre, these are bay leaf, cloves, allspice and peppers (you can take a mixture of peppers or just one black pepper). You can change and supplement the set of spices at your discretion. If you use ready-made spices for fish, be sure to read the composition before use. If there is already salt in the mixture, consider this, otherwise you risk over-salting the dish.
Step 13:
Add salt and sour cream. You can replace it with cream of any fat content or thick natural yogurt without additives.
Step 14:
Close the lid, bring to a boil.
Step 15:
Reduce the heat and simmer the dish under the lid for about 30 minutes. If you cook a pollock carcass, then 40 minutes.
Step 16:
Garnish take your favorite. Mashed potatoes, rice, pasta or just pickled vegetables will do. Bon appetit!
, Since the degree of salinity, sweetness, bitterness, sharpness, acid, burning is individual for everyone, always add spices, spices and seasonings, focusing on your taste! If you put some of the seasonings for the first time, then keep in mind that there are spices that it is especially important not to shift (for example, chili pepper).
Use oil with a high smoking temperature for frying! Any oils are useful only until a certain temperature is reached - the point of smoking, at which the oil begins to burn and toxic substances, including carcinogens, are formed in it.
Unrefined oils, with rare exceptions, have a low smoking point. There are a lot of unfiltered organic particles in them, which quickly begin to burn.
Refined oils are more resistant to heating, and their smoking point is higher. If you are going to cook food in the oven, on a frying pan or grill, make sure that you use oil with a high smoking point. The most common of the oils with a high smoking point: refined varieties of sunflower, olive and grape.
Caloric content of the products possible in the composition of the dish
- Onion - 41 kcal/100g
- Sour cream with 30% fat content - 340 kcal/100g
- Sour cream of 25% fat content - 284 kcal/100g
- Sour cream with 20 % fat content - 210 kcal/100g
- Sour cream of 10 % fat content - 115 kcal/100g
- Sour cream - 210 kcal/100g
- Carrots - 33 kcal/100g
- Dried carrots - 275 kcal/100g
- Boiled carrots - 25 kcal/100g
- Boiled pollock - 79 kcal/100g
- Fresh pollock - 72 kcal/100g
- Carnation - 323 kcal/100g
- Bay leaf - 313 kcal/100g
- Vegetable oil - 873 kcal/100g
- Salt - 0 kcal/100g
- Water - 0 kcal/100g
- Allspice - 263 kcal/100g
- A mixture of peppers with peas - 231 kcal/100g