GrownUps New Zealand

Bridget Jones’ pan-fried salmon with pine nut salsa

This recipe comes from Ottolenghi Simple by Yotam Ottolenghi (Ebury Press $65); photography by Jonathan Lovekin. If you haven’t already read Lyn Potter’s review of the cookbook, check it out here.

This is the dish Patrick Dempsey’s character tells Renée Zellweger’s Bridget Jones that he would have brought her on their imaginary second date in Bridget Jones’s Baby. ‘From Ottolenghi,’ says Dempsey, ‘delicious and healthy!’ And easy, we might add! What sounded like a bit of product placement on our part was, in fact, no such thing. The recipe didn’t even exist on our menu, so this is a retrospective acknowledgement.

Ingredients

Serves four (or half the recipe if you’re on that second date!)

Directions

  1. Cover the currants with boiling water and set aside to soak for 20 minutes while you prep the salmon and make the
  2. Mix the salmon with 2 teaspoons of oil, 3 teaspoon of salt and a good grind of pepper. Set aside while you make the salsa.
  3. Put 75ml of olive oil into a large sauté pan and place on a high heat. Add the celery and pine nuts and fry for 4–5 minutes, stirring frequently, until the nuts begin to brown (don’t take your eyes off them, as they can easily burn). Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the capers and their brine, the olives, saffron and its water and a pinch of salt. Drain the currants and add these, along with the parsley, lemon zest and lemon Set aside.
  4. Put the remaining 1 tablespoon of oil into a large frying pan and place on a medium-high heat. Once hot, add the salmon fillets, skin side down, and fry for 3 minutes, until the skin is Reduce the heat to medium, then flip the fillets over and continue to fry for 2–4 minutes (depending on how much you like the salmon cooked). Remove from the pan and set aside.
  5. Arrange the salmon on four plates and spoon over the If you have any celery leaves reserved, scatter these on top.