I had definitely used buckwheat flour before and may have even used it in some type of pancakes, but I had never made proper blinis. The batter was made in a few steps involving warmed milk, yeast, a mix of flours, egg yolks, and whisked egg whites that were gently folded into the mix. I cooked the blinis on a griddle with melted butter brushed over the surface. The smoked herring was steeped in milk with a bay leaf before being mashed with butter, lemon juice, and olive oil. I should mention, the recipe as shown below calls for a mix of smoked herring and cooked white fish. I used all smoked herring. Mashed potato and more butter were added before creme fraiche and chives were folded in to form the brandade. If you have chiled the brandade before serving, you should let it sit at room temperature for a bit to soften to a scoopable state. Lots of garnishes were prepped including cornichons, capers, radishes, and arugula.
I love a serve-yourself hors d’oeuvre with lots of options for toppings. The smoked herring brandade was spooned onto a blini, and sliced cornichon, capers, radish slices, and baby arugula leaves were balanced on top. The pickled and peppery toppings balanced the rich brandade, and the buckwheat blinis were perfect delivery vehicles for everything. I’m still thinking twice before trusting every certification label, and I'm eating a bit less seafood that I previously did. But, I’m delighted to use more tiny fish like herring and to make use of more of each fish whenever I can.
Smoked Herring and Buckwheat Blinis
Recipes excerpted with permission from Take One Fish: The New School of Scale-to-Tail Cooking and Eating by Josh Niland published by Hardie Grant Books, August 2021.
This tastes as joyful as it looks, with the condiments lifting the smoked herring brandade into truly celebratory territory. Blinis are not hard to make but they often fall down for a few basic reasons: a stodgy mix that hasn’t been lightened with egg white or leavened with yeast, too much ghee in the frying pan (creating a greasy crust around the edges) or sitting around for too long after being cooked. The other challenge is getting the size and colouring consistent, but here, practice makes perfect. As long as you keep all of the above in mind, you’ll be fine.
SERVES 2 AS A LIGHT MEAL
4 French shallots, finely diced
90 g (3 oz/1⁄2 cup) cornichons, drained
and finely diced
60 g (2 oz/1⁄2 cup) tiny salted capers, rinsed and drained
8 radishes, cut into thin wedges
30 g (1 oz/1 cup) picked watercress extra-virgin olive oil, for dressing
sea salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper
seeded mustard, to serve (optional)
Smoked herring brandade
80 g (23/4 oz) Smoked Herring Fillet
210 ml (7 fl oz) full-cream (whole) milk
1 bay leaf
70 g (2 1⁄2 oz) skinless, boneless white-fleshed fish, such as ling or snapper
60 g (2 oz) butter, softened
juice of 1⁄2 lemon
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
60 g (2 oz) mashed potato
fine salt
1 1⁄2 tablespoons sour cream or crème fraîche, plus extra to serve
2 bunches chives, very finely chopped
Buckwheat blinis
125 g (4 1⁄2 oz) buckwheat flour
125 g (4 1⁄2 oz) plain (all-purpose) flour
1 teaspoon fine salt
250 ml (8 1⁄2 fl oz/1 cup) full-cream (whole) milk
10 g (1⁄4 oz) dried yeast
3 eggs, separated
ghee, for pan-frying
To make the brandade, check the smoked herring meat and make sure it is boneless and skinless. Put the milk and bay leaf in a small saucepan and bring to the boil, then remove from the heat and add the smoked herring. Leave for 10 minutes, then strain the herring and discard the milk (or keep it to use in mashed potatoes or a root vegetable soup).
Steam the white fish in a bamboo steamer for 5 minutes or until the flesh is cooked and flakes apart easily.
Put the herring and fish in a small bowl, add half the butter and mash together with a fork. Drizzle over the lemon juice and 1 tablespoon olive oil, mixing with the fork as you go, then add the mashed potato and mix well. Add the remaining butter and olive oil and mix again, then season to taste with salt. Leave the mixture to cool, then fold in the sour cream or crème fraîche. Chill in the fridge for at least 1 hour.
For the blinis, sift both flours and the salt into a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment.
Pour the milk into a small saucepan and warm to blood temperature over a low heat. Remove from the heat, add the yeast and let it dissolve, then stand for 5 minutes until frothy.
Turn the mixer onto a low speed and combine the flours and the salt. Slowly pour in the milk and mix for 2 minutes to form a smooth batter. Cover the bowl with a tea towel (dish towel) and allow to prove in a warm place for 45 minutes or until doubled in size.
Add the egg yolks to the batter and mix with a whisk for 1 minute.
Add the egg whites to the very clean bowl of your stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, and whisk the whites to soft peaks. Add half to the batter and gently fold through to loosen it, then fold in the remaining egg white (this second batch aerates the batter to give the blini the desired lightness). Set aside to prove for another 15 minutes.
To cook the blinis, heat a wide-based cast-iron frying pan over a medium-low heat for a good 2 minutes before starting. It’s important that the pan is hot. Add 1 tablespoon ghee and swirl it around to ensure the base is well greased, with a very light haze coming off the ghee.
Working in batches of six, add a tablespoon of batter for each blini to the pan, taking care to create neat circles. Cook for 30 seconds or until the edges are lightly golden and bubbles start to appear on the tops. Flip the blinis over and cook for another 30–60 seconds until they are firm but soft to the touch and the centres are set. Transfer to a wire rack to cool or place in a cloth napkin to keep warm. Repeat with the remaining batter. You should have enough to make 25–30 blinis.
To serve, assemble the shallot, cornichon, capers and radish separately alongside the herring brandade. Top the brandade with the finely chopped chives, dress the watercress with a little olive oil and season. Serve with the blinis and a little seeded mustard, if you like.
Perfect timing! I've been playing with buckwheat pancakes lately, and was thinking about experiment with blinis. Will definitely be doing that -- your recipe looks terrific. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious ! Happy New year!
ReplyDeleteI love smoked fish! I seriously would eat the spread with a spoon, but hey are so good with buckwheat blinis too.
ReplyDeleteCustard Tart with sardine flavoring? Now THAT sounds interesting! I often fillet my own fish and then make stock out of it but notice that it seems cheaper to just buy the meat of the fish. For New Years, I bought $280 worth of fresh lobster, but was too lazy to use the shells to make some stock. Sustainability, here we come!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds absolutely delicious. It's been a long time since I've had smoked herring.
ReplyDelete