Лосось MI-CUIT
 

Salmon Mi-Cuit

A rough translation of the French phrase mi-cuit is half-cooked, but that utterly fails to express the decadent texture of this salmon. A combination of heat and salt work in concert to ensure that, although served chilled, the salmon is anything but raw.

As a wave of concentrated dissolved salt permeates the flesh (concentrated enough to raise the salinity above 2%), various proteins in muscle fibers begin to unravel and entangle. This is curing, and it's analogous to increasing the temperature of flesh with heat. Both salt or heat alone can take meats and seafood from raw to cured or raw to cooked (either will denature proteins and cause them to gel), but when used together you can do the same with less salt and a lower temperature. The result is a remarkable texture.

One subtlety of this recipe, which often goes unnoticed, is the need to chill the salmon for at least six hours before serving. The chloride ions from the salt are still diffusing towards equilibrium after the sous vide cooking step, and this chilling step allows the texture to fully develop.

Finally, cooking in vacuum-sealed packaging has the benefit of keeping the salmon impeccably fresh by preventing damaging oxidation. If you don't have access to a vacuum chamber sealer, don't fret: We've got a hack that will help you achieve similar results, without all the equipment.

Provided that you store the salmon mi-cuit at a temperature below 41 °F / 5 °C, the combination of low-temperature cooking, mild curing with salt, and oxygen-free packaging keeps our salmon mi-cuit fresh for 10 days or more. This makes it a delicious and versatile ingredient to keep around for a quick, healthy dish such as our Salmon 104 °F.

   
1600
 
g
80
 
g
400
 
g
Salmon loin, skinless
 
160
 
g
EQUIPMENT

,
    (optional)

YIELD

10 servings

 
 
TIMING

About 8 hours total; 30 minutes active prep

1

Scale ingredients

1600
 
g
160
 
g
80
 
g

2

Make brine

Dissolve salt and sugar into the water.

Chill brine to less than 41 °F / 5 °C.

CHEF TIP: Dissolve the sugar and salt into half the weight of water, then add the rest of the water in the form of ice to quickly chill the brine.

3

Prepare salmon

400
 
g
Salmon loin, skinless
 

While brine is chilling, remove pin bones from salmon loin.

4

Brine salmon

Submerge salmon loin in chilled brine for 45 minutes.

5

Remove salmon from brine

Strain salmon portions from the brine. Pat dry with a paper towel.

6

Vacuum-package salmon, or seal in a plastic bag using another method

Vacuum-package the salmon loins individually. Add a small amount of olive oil to the packaging with salmon to make it easier to slip the cooked salmon out later.

HOME-COOK HACK: If you don't have a vacuum sealer, you can also used an improvised method like water displacement packaging.

7

Cook sous vide at 104 °F / 40 °C for 60 minutes

NOTE: If you don’t have access to sous vide equipment, don’t worry: Watch this simple introduction to cooking sous vide with an inexpensive digital thermometer.

8

Chill immediately; refrigerate

Remove cooked salmon and submerge in ice water.

Refrigerate for at least six hours for texture to set.

9

Slice; reserve

Portion chilled salmon loin into ten 40 g portions, each about ¾ in. / 2 cm. thick.

Cover and refrigerate sliced portions until needed.

Сообщить о нарушении Подробнее