One of the advantages of having a friend in the fish biz is the occasional hors commerce hookup: in this case a side of wild sockeye salmon and a big hunk of cod fillet. The cod is going to be either fish and chips or a coconut curry, but first off we had at the salmon.

You see where this is going, right?

I made a few of these for myself while I worked on a big platter: rolls of different combinations of the fish with tomato, carrot, cucumber, chives, red scallions, shiso, radish greens, and edible flowers plus some sashimi for good measure. A 180 ml bottle of Tomio Hanaichirin "A Flower" Junmai Daiginjo sake was a handsome match for the meal; round and supple, with excellent balance between the honey and melon flavors and the almost beany koji notes. It should come in a bigger bottle. (That's it in the triangular blue thing behind the fish board).
I also picked a variety of greens (black and red kale, chard, mizuna) and steamed them before rolling them into an oshiashi of sorts. Sometimes I like to have the food really pop against the plate, but this time I opted for a more unified, earthy combination so it looked like the whole thing grew on the plate. I sauced the rolls with ponzu and Brother Victor-Antoine's raspberry vinegar, and garnished them with thyme flowers and grated bottarga that Claudia gave me.

This meal didn't stand a chance. We finished it all, and the cat was ecstatic with the scraps.

3 comments:
ok, that last shot is OVER THE TOP. but that's what you were going for... i know you.
honestly, it looks like something you'd serve at a wedding. very special. very pretty.
Pretty. But no offense.
Claudia: It was the wedding of a lot of fish and my tummy.
CC: I've never been so offended in my whole life.
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