Marides Marinates
Submitted by kjts
Greek marinated smelts fried in flour, then simmered in a white wine and vinegar marinade with herbs and mustard. A classic cold appetizer served chilled, perfect for a meze spread.
YIELD
15 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
25 minREADY
35 minMarides marinates is a traditional Greek way of preserving small fried fish in a tangy, herbed marinade. The smelts get a spritz of lemon juice, a roll through flour, and a quick fry until golden. Then they take a bath in a simmered sauce of dry white wine, white wine vinegar, parsley, thyme, oregano, and diluted mustard. The whole thing chills in the fridge and is served cold.
The fry-then-marinate technique is what gives this dish its layered flavor. The crispy flour coating soaks up the wine-vinegar marinade as it cools, turning soft and tangy while the fish underneath stays firm and flavorful. It’s a completely different eating experience than plain fried fish.
Bring the marinade to a boil with the fish in it, then immediately pull it off the heat. That brief boil is just enough to marry the flavors. Overcooking at this stage makes the fish mushy and falling apart. You want them intact and holding their shape when you plate them cold.
Chef Tips
- Fry the smelts in batches so the oil stays hot. Crowding the pan drops the temperature and you’ll get soggy fish instead of crispy.
- Let the dish cool to room temperature before refrigerating. Putting it in the fridge hot creates condensation that waters down the marinade.
- These taste better after sitting in the fridge overnight. The marinade penetrates deeper and the flavors become more balanced.
Variations
- Use fresh sardines or anchovies instead of smelts for a bolder, more assertive fish flavor.
- Add a few sliced garlic cloves and a bay leaf to the marinade for extra aromatic depth.
- Swap thyme for fresh dill for a brighter, more distinctly Greek herb profile.
Ingredients
Directions
Sprinkle each smelt with lemon juice, roll in flour, and fry in hot oil about a half-inch deep.
Drain on absorbent paper.
Meanwhile, in a small saucepan combine the wine, vinegar, parsley, thyme or oregano, diluted mustard, oil, salt, and pepper.
Simmer 8 minutes, then add the smelts.
Bring to a boil and remove from the heat.
Cool, then chill before serving.
Serve cold.
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