Best 6 Barneys King Salmon Gravlax Recipes

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Indulge in the exquisite flavors of Barney's King Salmon Gravlax, a Nordic delicacy that combines the richness of salmon with a symphony of herbs, spices, and curing techniques. Embark on a culinary journey with our comprehensive guide, featuring three delectable variations: the classic Barney Green Gravlax, the vibrant Beet Gravlax, and the aromatic Dill Gravlax. Discover the art of gravlax preparation, from selecting the finest salmon to creating a harmonious blend of flavors. Each recipe is meticulously detailed, ensuring success in your culinary endeavor. Elevate your next gathering or savor the luxurious taste of gravlax as an elegant appetizer or main course. Embrace the culinary legacy of Barney Green and elevate your taste buds to new heights.

Check out the recipes below so you can choose the best recipe for yourself!

GRILLED SALMON WITH SHERRY VINEGAR-HONEY GLAZE AND SPICY TOMATO RELISH



Grilled Salmon with Sherry Vinegar-Honey Glaze and Spicy Tomato Relish image

Provided by Bobby Flay

Categories     main-dish

Yield 4 servings

Number Of Ingredients 14

1 cup sherry vinegar
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1/4 cup honey
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon ancho chile powder
Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
4 salmon fillets, 6 ounces each
2 medium ripe tomatoes, chopped
2 tablespoons finely diced Spanish onion
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
1/4 cup olive oil
Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste

Steps:

  • In small saucepan over high heat, reduce vinegar to 1/4 cup. In mixing bowl, combine vinegar syrup with mustard, honey, Worcestershire and ancho chile powder and season to taste with salt and pepper. Let rest 30 minutes. Preheat grill. Brush salmon with the glaze and grill 3 minutes on each side. Serve with Spicy Tomato Relish.
  • For the Spicy Tomato Relish: Combine all ingredients in a bowl and season with salt and pepper to taste. Serve at room temperature.

GRAVADLAX



Gravadlax image

Cure your own salmon, Scandinavian-style, with dill, juniper, and lemon and serve with a mustard sauce

Provided by Barney Desmazery

Time P2D

Number Of Ingredients 12

2 x 500g pieces skin-on organic salmon fillet, both cut from the centre of the fish. Ask your fishmonger to pin-bone it for you
75g flaky sea salt
75g golden caster sugar
1 tsp black peppercorn, roughly crushed
zest of 1 lemon
8 juniper berries, crushed (optional)
small bunch (about 20g) dill, roughly chopped
2 tbsp gin (optional)
pumpernickel sauce, to serve
small bunch (about 20g) dill, roughly chopped
4 tbsp each Dijon mustard, cider vinegar, honey and sunflower oil
2 tbsp muscovado sugar

Steps:

  • Pat the salmon dry with kitchen paper and run your hands over the flesh to see if there are any stray small bones - if there are, use a pair of tweezers to pull them out. Set the salmon fillets aside.
  • Tip the salt, sugar, peppercorns, lemon zest, juniper and dill into a food processor and blitz until you have a bright green, wet salt mixture or 'cure'. Unravel some cling film but keep it attached to the roll. Lay the first fillet of salmon skin-side down and then pack the cure over the flesh. Drizzle with gin, if using and top with the 2nd fillet, flesh-side down. Roll the sandwiched fillets tightly in cling film to create a package.
  • Place the fish in a shallow baking dish or shallow-sided tray and lay another tray on top. Weigh the tray down with a couple of tins or bottles and place in the fridge for at least 48 hrs or up to 4 days, turning the fish over every 12 hours or so. The longer you leave it, the more cured it will become.
  • To make the sauce, tip all the sauce ingredients into a blender. Blitz until you have a thickened dressing.
  • To serve, unwrap the fish and brush off the marinade with kitchen paper. Rinse it if you like. You can slice the fish classically into long thin slices, leaving the skin behind, or remove the skin it and slice it straight down. Serve the sliced fish on a large platter or individual plates with pumpernickel bread, dill and mustard sauce.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 288 calories, Fat 15.9 grams fat, SaturatedFat 2.5 grams saturated fat, Carbohydrate 15.2 grams carbohydrates, Sugar 15.2 grams sugar, Fiber 0.1 grams fiber, Protein 20.8 grams protein, Sodium 4.3 milligram of sodium

EASY GRAVLAX



Easy Gravlax image

We seasoned the gravlax with coriander and white peppercorns, but you may use juniper berries, caraway seeds, or grated lemon peel. Serve with salmon roe, snipped chives, and a dollop of creme fraiche atop our Curry Waffles.

Provided by Martha Stewart

Categories     Food & Cooking     Appetizers

Yield Serves 4 to 6

Number Of Ingredients 7

1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup coarse salt
1 tablespoon whole white peppercorns, crushed
1 tablespoon coriander seeds, crushed
2 one-pound center-cut salmon fillets, skin on
2 ounces fresh dill, coarsely chopped
1/4 cup aquavit or vodka

Steps:

  • Combine the sugar, salt, peppercorns, and coriander seeds in a small bowl. Set aside. Place the salmon fillets on a parchment-lined work surface, and remove any remaining bones.
  • Cover the flesh side of each with the spice mixture, gently rubbing it onto the flesh.
  • Spread the dill on top of the spices; pour the aquavit or vodka over the dill.
  • Place one fillet on top of the other, and wrap tightly in plastic wrap.
  • Place the wrapped fillets in a glass or enamel pan. Place a heavy object, such as a canned good, in a smaller pan, and place on top of the fish. Transfer both pans to the refrigerator, and chill for 12 hours. Remove the fish from the pan; pour off the liquid that has accumulated in the pan and discard. Turn the fish over, and place the weighted pan back on top of the fish. Continue to refrigerate for 3 more days, turning the fish over every 12 hours.
  • After 3 days, remove and discard the plastic wrap. Scrape the dill and spices from the surface of both fillets. To serve, slice each fillet on the diagonal, as thinly as possible. Wrap the remaining gravlax in plastic wrap, and store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.

BALSAMIC AND ROSEMARY GRILLED SALMON



Balsamic and Rosemary Grilled Salmon image

This is a quick and easy way to grill salmon. It's wonderful served with baked asparagus with balsamic butter sauce and boiled new potatoes!

Provided by joyfuljoyous

Categories     Main Dish Recipes     Seafood Main Dish Recipes     Salmon     Salmon Fillet Recipes

Time 50m

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 7

4 (4 ounce) salmon fillets
sea salt to taste
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
3 tablespoons olive oil
ΒΌ cup lemon juice
1 clove garlic, minced
1 sprig fresh rosemary, minced

Steps:

  • Season salmon fillets to taste with sea salt, and place into a shallow, glass dish. Whisk together vinegar, olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, and rosemary; pour over salmon fillets. Cover, and refrigerate at least 30 minutes.
  • Preheat an outdoor grill for medium-high heat, and lightly oil grate.
  • Remove salmon from marinade, and shake off excess. Discard remaining marinade. Cook on preheated grill until fish is opaque in the center and flakes easily with a fork, about 4 minutes per side.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 279.9 calories, Carbohydrate 2.2 g, Cholesterol 55.9 mg, Fat 21.1 g, Fiber 0.1 g, Protein 19.7 g, SaturatedFat 3.6 g, Sodium 135.6 mg, Sugar 0.9 g

GRAVLAX



Gravlax image

I think of making my own gravlax - the Nordic sugar-salt cured salmon - as the gentle, blue-square cooking analog of an intermediate ski trail: It's mostly easy, but requires some experience. While butchering a whole salmon and cold smoking what you've butchered are also exhilarating milestones in the life of an advancing home cook (both a little farther up the mountain and a little steeper on the run down), buying a nice fillet and burying it in salt, sugar and a carpet of chopped fresh dill for a few days is a great confidence-building day on the slopes, so to speak. The cured gravlax will last a solid five days once sliced, in the refrigerator. If a whole side of salmon is more than you need at once, the rest freezes very satisfactorily.

Provided by Gabrielle Hamilton

Categories     brunch, dinner, lunch, seafood, main course

Time P5DT30m

Yield 10 to 12 servings (about 3 pounds)

Number Of Ingredients 10

1 side clean, fresh and fat Alaskan king salmon, skin on, pin bones removed, neatly trimmed of all undesirable bits of fat and tissue (about 3 to 3 1/2 pounds total), or 1 fat and gorgeous 2 1/2-pound fillet cut from the widest part of the body
1/2 cup kosher salt
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup finely ground black pepper
2 bunches dill (about 4 ounces each), clean and dry, left intact (no need to pick fronds from stem), coarsely chopped (about 2 cups)
1 cup unsalted butter (2 sticks), left at room temperature for an hour (not hard from the fridge yet not so warm as to be greasy)
1 bunch dill (about 4 ounces), clean and dry, fronds removed from stems, fronds finely chopped (about 3/4 cup)
1 medium shallot, peeled and finely minced
3 tablespoons Dijon mustard
Soft dark pumpernickel sandwich bread

Steps:

  • Cure the salmon: Lay salmon skin-side down, flesh-side up in a glass or stainless-steel baking dish. (A large lasagna dish works well.) In a small bowl, toss together the salt, sugar and pepper until blended. Sprinkle the mixture over the salmon evenly, with abandon, until fully covered, as if under a blanket of snow. Use all of it.
  • Spread all the chopped dill on top of the cure-covered salmon to make a thick, grassy carpet.
  • Lay plastic wrap or parchment paper over the salmon to cover and press down, then place a heavy weight - such as a 2-gallon zip-top bag filled with water - on top, to weigh heavily on the curing fish. Refrigerate just like this, without disturbing, for 5 days, turning the salmon over midway through the cure - on Day 3 - then covering and weighting it again.
  • To serve, mix together the softened butter, dill, shallot and mustard until well blended.
  • Remove salmon from the cure, which has now become liquid, brushing off the dill with a paper towel, then set fillet on a cutting board.
  • With a long, thin, beveled slicing knife tilted toward the horizon, slice salmon thinly, stopping short of cutting through the skin. Generally, you begin slicing a few inches from the tail end and you slice in the direction of the tail, moving your knife back, slice by slice, toward the fatter, wider belly portion of the fillet. The last slices are always hard to get. Once you have shingled the fillet, run your knife between skin and flesh, releasing all the slices, then transfer them to parchment until ready to serve.
  • Spread the compound butter on bread, then drape sliced gravlax on top, and eat as open-faced sandwiches.

MARK BITTMAN'S GRAVLAX



Mark Bittman's Gravlax image

Use king or sockeye salmon from a good source. In either case, the fish must be spanking fresh. Gravlax keeps for a week after curing; and, though it's not an ideal solution, you can successfully freeze gravlax for a few weeks.

Provided by Mark Bittman

Categories     breakfast, brunch, lunch, condiments, project, appetizer

Time P1DT15m

Yield At least 12 appetizer servings

Number Of Ingredients 7

1 3- to 4-pound cleaned salmon without the head, skin on
1 cup salt
2 cups brown sugar
1 tablespoon freshly ground black pepper
1/4 cup spirits, like brandy, gin, aquavit or lemon vodka
2 good-size bunches of fresh dill, roughly chopped, stems and all
Lemon wedges for serving

Steps:

  • Fillet the salmon or have the fishmonger do it; the fish need not be scaled. Lay both halves, skin side down, on a plate.
  • Toss together the salt, brown sugar and pepper and rub this mixture all over the salmon (the skin too); splash on the spirits. Put most of the dill on the flesh side of one of the fillets, sandwich them together, tail to tail, and rub any remaining salt-sugar mixture on the outside; cover with any remaining dill, then wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Cover the sandwich with another plate and top with something that weighs a couple of pounds -- some unopened cans, for example. Refrigerate.
  • Open the package every 12 to 24 hours and baste, inside and out, with the accumulated juices. When the flesh is opaque, on the second or third day (you will see it changing when you baste it), slice thinly as you would smoked salmon -- on the bias and without the skin -- and serve with rye bread or pumpernickel and lemon wedges.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 379, UnsaturatedFat 10 grams, Carbohydrate 24 grams, Fat 18 grams, Fiber 0 grams, Protein 27 grams, SaturatedFat 4 grams, Sodium 377 milligrams, Sugar 23 grams

Tips:

  • Choose the right salmon: Look for a firm, brightly colored fillet with no bruises or tears. King salmon is the traditional choice for gravlax, but you can also use other types of salmon, such as sockeye or coho.
  • Use fresh, high-quality ingredients: The better the quality of your ingredients, the better your gravlax will be. Use fresh herbs, citrus fruits, and spices.
  • Cure the salmon for the right amount of time: The curing time will vary depending on the thickness of the salmon fillet. As a general rule, cure the salmon for 24 hours for every 1/2 inch of thickness.
  • Keep the salmon cold during the curing process: The salmon should be kept in a cool, dark place during the curing process. This will help to prevent the salmon from spoiling.
  • Slice the salmon thinly before serving: Gravlax is traditionally served thinly sliced. Use a sharp knife to slice the salmon against the grain.

Conclusion:

Gravlax is a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed as an appetizer, main course, or snack. It is easy to make and can be tailored to your own taste preferences. With a little planning, you can make gravlax at home that is just as good as, or even better than, what you would find in a restaurant. So next time you are looking for a special dish to serve, give gravlax a try. You won't be disappointed!

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