James Martin takes on the chip shop with his delicious deep-fried fillets of hake in beer batter – with mushy peas of course.
Ingredients
- For the mushy peas
- 225g/8oz dried
marrowfat peas - 1 tsp
bicarbonate of soda - 25g/1oz
butter sea salt and freshly ground black pepper - 1
lemon, cut into wedges
- 225g/8oz dried
- For the beer battered hake
- 200g/7oz
plain flour - 15g/½oz fresh
yeast - pinch
salt - pinch
caster sugar - 200ml/7fl oz
beer - 1 tbsp cider
vinegar vegetable oil, for deep frying - 4 x 200g/7oz
hake fillet, skin on, pin boned and trimmed - 1
onion, sliced into rings - 4 slices thick
white bread butter, for the bread, optional
- 200g/7oz
- For the rapeseed tartare sauce
- 3 free-range
egg yolks - 1 tbsp
Dijon mustard - 2 tbsp cider
vinegar - 300ml/11fl oz
rapeseed oil - 50g/1¾oz
capers - 75g/2½oz
gherkins, chopped - 1
shallot, finely chopped - 1 small bunch
dill, chopped - 2 tbsp chopped flatleaf
parsley - ½
lemon, juice only
- 3 free-range
Preparation method
For the mushy peas, soak the peas in a large bowl, in three times their volume of water for at least 1½ hours or, if you have the time, overnight.
Drain the peas, rinse under the tap, and place on the stove in a large pan and cover with the water. Add the bicarbonate of soda. Cover and bring to the boil and once boiled, reduce the heat and simmer the peas for 1½-2 hours, stirring from time to time.
The peas should be soft and mushy in texture but not too dry. If they are wet, continue cooking over the heat with the lid off to dry out a little. Beat in the butter and season with salt and pepper.
For the beer battered hake, combine the flour, yeast, salt and sugar in a bowl.
Add the beer and vinegar and whisk until it forms a thick batter.
Set aside to ferment for about 30 minutes. It is ready to use when the mixture starts to bubble.
Heat a deep fat fryer to 190C/375F or heat the oil for deep-frying in a deep heavy-based frying pan until a breadcrumb sizzles and turns brown when dropped into it. (CAUTION: Hot oil can be dangerous. Do not leave unattended.)
Dip each piece of onion into the batter to coat thoroughly. Cook them in batches in the fat fryer, and cook for 2-3 minutes until golden-brown and cooked through.
Dip each piece of fish into the batter to coat thoroughly. Lower them carefully into the fryer, and cook one at a time. Cook for 4-6 minutes until the fish is cooked through and the batter is golden-brown.
Drizzle the remaining batter into the fat to make scraps.
Butter the bread with the softened butter and cut in half.
For rapeseed tartare sauce, whisk together the egg yolks, mustard and vinegar in a bowl or small processor.
Still whisking, start adding the rapeseed oil very slowly to make a mayonnaise – the mixture should be thick and light once the oil is incorporated.
Stir in the capers, gherkins, shallot and herbs.
Season with salt and pepper and a touch of lemon juice.
To serve, place the fish on plates, with a spoonful of mushy peas alongside. Pile the bread and butter next to it and finish with a squeeze of lemon juice and spoonful of tartare sauce.