Soles Stewed in Cream

Modern cookery for private families · Acton, Eliza · 1845
Source
Modern cookery for private families
Yield
3.0 – 4.0 soles
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (10)
Instructions (14)
  1. Prepare soles with exceeding nicety.
  2. Put soles into boiling water slightly salted.
  3. Simmer for two minutes only.
  4. Lift soles out and let them drain.
  5. Lay soles into a wide stewpan.
  6. Add as much sweet rich cream as will nearly cover them.
  7. Add a good seasoning of pounded mace, cayenne, and salt.
  8. Stew the fish softly from six to ten minutes, or until the flesh parts readily from the bones.
  9. Dish the soles.
  10. Stir the juice of half a lemon to the sauce.
  11. Pour the sauce over the soles.
  12. Send them immediately to table.
Optional Thickening
  1. If approved, some lemon-rind may be boiled in the cream.
  2. If the sauce requires thickening, stir in a small teaspoonful of arrow-root, very smoothly mixed with a little milk, before adding the lemon-juice.
Original Text
SOLES STEWED IN CREAM. Prepare some very fresh middling sized soles with exceeding nicety, put them into boiling water slightly salted, and simmer them for two minutes only; lift them out, and let them drain; lay them into a wide stewpan with as much sweet rich cream as will nearly cover them; add a good seasoning of pounded mace, cayenne, and salt; stew the fish softly from six to ten minutes, or until the flesh parts readily from the bones; dish them, stir the juice of half a lemon to the sauce, pour it over the soles, and send them immediately to table. Some lemon-rind may be boiled in the cream, if approved; and a small teaspoonful of arrow-root, very smoothly mixed with a little milk, may be stirred to the sauce (should it require thickening) before the lemon-juice is added. Turbot and brill also may be dressed by this receipt, time proportioned to their size being of course allowed for them. Soles, 3 or 4: boiled in water 2 minutes. Cream, 1/2 to whole pint; salt, mace, cayenne: fish stewed, 6 to 10 minutes. Juice of half a lemon. Obs.—In Cornwall the fish is laid at once into thick clotted cream, and stewed entirely in it; but this method gives to the sauce, which ought to be extremely delicate, a coarse fishy flavour which the previous boil in water prevents. At Penzance, grey mullet, after being scaled, are divided in the middle, just covered with cold water, and softly boiled, with the addition of branches of parsley, pepper and salt, until the flesh of the back parts easily from the bone; clotted cream, minced parsley, and lemon-juice are then added to the sauce, and the mullets are dished with the heads and tails laid even to the thick parts of the back, where the fish were cut asunder. Hake, too, is there divided at every joint (having previously been scaled), dipped into egg, then thickly covered with fine bread-crumbs mixed with plenty of minced parsley, and fried a fine brown; or, the back-bone being previously taken out, the fish is sliced into cutlets, and then fried.
Notes