Sauteed Sturgeon with Vermouth Dill Sauce
Submitted by bobbiejohn
Sauteed sturgeon topped with a silky vermouth and dill butter sauce. A restaurant-style fish dinner with a classic French-inspired reduction.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
25 minREADY
1 hrsSturgeon is the steak of the sea, meaty and firm with enough density to hold up to a proper sauté without flaking apart. A quick two-minute sear on each side in butter is all this fish needs, which means the star of the show is really the sauce.
The vermouth and dill reduction is classic French saucier territory, built in stages. Shallots soften in butter, vermouth reduces down to just a tablespoon, fish stock reduces again, and cream goes in before cold butter gets whisked in at the end to emulsify the whole thing into a glossy, luxurious pan sauce. Each reduction concentrates flavor, so no shortcuts.
Keep the sauce warm but never let it boil once the butter emulsion is in, or it will break. Low and steady is the way.
Pro Tips
- Pat the sturgeon completely dry before it hits the pan. Wet fish steams instead of browning.
- Whisk the final butter in off the heat, a piece at a time. This is mounting butter, the technique that gives the sauce its silky body.
- Use dry vermouth, not sweet. Sweet vermouth throws the whole sauce off balance.
- If the sauce breaks, pull it off the heat, whisk in a tablespoon of cold cream, and it usually comes back together.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
The Vermouth Dill Sauce-- Sauté shallots in 1 tablespoon butter.
Add vermouth and dill; reduce to 1 tablespoon.
Add fish stock and reduce again to 2 tablespoons.
Add cream, bring to a boil, and whisk in 5 tablespoons butter.
Salt and pepper to taste. Keep warm.
The Sturgeon-- Sauté the sturgeon in 2 tablespoons butter for 2 minutes on each side.
To serve, divide sturgeon among six plates.
Garnish with the Vermouth Dill Sauce.
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