Sweet Date & Sour Tamarind Sea Bass
Noor Murad

Serves
2Ingredients
60g tamarind pulp (from a block) | |
220ml boiling water | |
60g pitted Medjool dates (about 3) | |
1 small red onion, very finely chopped | |
1 small green pepper, stem and seeds removed, finely chopped into ½cm cubes | |
2 garlic cloves, finely chopped | |
1-2 green chillies, finely chopped, seeds and all (depending on your heat preference) | |
30g coriander leaves and soft stems, finely chopped | |
3½ tablespoons olive oil, plus extra to serve | |
4 medium unskinned sea bass fillets | |
1 teaspoon mild curry powder | |
½ lime | |
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper |
I adore sweet and sour flavours together but especially the combination of dates and tamarind, which is a match made in (food) heaven. This is a wonderfully easy dish to make, with super-punchy flavours. Serve as a light lunch with some lightly dressed greens.
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Instructions
1. | Preheat the oven to 210°C fan/230°C. |
2. | Line a shallow baking dish (roughly 30x20cm) with baking paper. |
3. | Place the tamarind in a small heatproof bowl and pour over 120ml of the boiling water. |
4. | In a separate small heatproof bowl, add the dates and the remaining 100ml of the boiling water. Set both aside for 15 minutes. |
5. | Meanwhile, in a medium bowl mix together the onion, green pepper, garlic, chilli, coriander, 2 tablespoons of the oil, ¼ teaspoon salt and a good grind of pepper. |
6. | When ready, remove the dates from their water and place them in the bowl of a small food processor along with 2 tablespoons of their water, then blitz until the dates are finely chopped and you have a paste (you can also do this with a hand-held blender). |
7. | Use your fingers to loosen the tamarind pulp from the seeds, then pour this through a fine-mesh sieve (strainer) set over a separate bowl. |
8. | Push down on the solids to extract as much of the tamarind liquid as possible, scraping at the bottom of the sieve as well. |
9. | Discard the solids and then mix in the date paste. |
10. | Pat dry the sea bass fillets and place them, skin-side down, in the lined baking dish (don’t worry if they’re slightly overlapping). |
11. | Sprinkle the flesh all over with the curry powder, ¾ teaspoon salt and a good grind of pepper. |
12. | Spoon over all the tamarind and date mixture, using your fingers to coat the flesh, then pour over the remaining 1½ tablespoons of oil. |
13. | Lastly, spoon the onion and pepper mixture down the fillets. |
14. | Bake for 17-20 minutes, or until cooked through and lightly coloured. |
15. | Transfer to a plate, squeeze over the lime and drizzle with some extra olive oil. |
This is an edited
extract from
Lugma: Abundant
Dishes And Stories
From My Middle
East by Noor
Murad, published
by Quadrille.
Photography by
Matt Russell and
Matt Wardle.
Tags: Issue 231