
The sauce here is fairly spicy but well-tempered by the fishcakes and lots of white rice and some yoghurt if you like. The depth of flavour and balance is superb. You can cook the sauce and prep the kofta mixture in advance.
Wine Suggestion: this works with Grenache – Tempranillo blends, especially if they’re fruit forward and low/no oak like Jesus Romero’s Rubus from rural Aragon. We love this as it’s real hands-off winemaking at it’s best, capturing the essence and energy of the fruit in the vineyard.
Fish koftas in chilli and tomato sauce – serves 4
FOR THE KOFTAS:
- 500g firm white fish without skin and bones, we used hake
- 4 scallions, finely sliced
- 10g dill, roughly choped, plus extra picked fronds to serve
- 1 green chilli, deseeded and finely chopped
- 1½ tsp finely grated lemon zest
- 1 egg, beaten
- 30g panko breadcrumbs
- 3 tbsp olive oil
FOR THE TOMATO SAUCE:
- 15g dried ancho chillies, stems removed
- 2 tsp caraway seeds, toasted and roughly crushed
- 1 tbsp cumin seeds, toasted and roughly crushed
- 6 cloves of garlic, peeled
- 1 onion, roughly chopped
- 60m olive oil
- 1 green chilli, halved and seeds removed
- 1 tbsp tomato purée
- 3-4 plum tomatoes, roughly grated and skins discarded
- 300ml chicken stock or vegetable stock
- 2 tsp caster sugar
- 25g fresh coriander, roughly chopped
Make the sauce first. Put the dried chillies into a bowl and cover with lots of boiling water. Leave to soak for 20 minutes, then drain and discard the liquid and the seeds. Roughly chop the chillies and put them into a food processor with two-thirds of the caraway and cumin seeds, the garlic, the onion and 2 tbsp of the oil. Whizz until you have a coarse paste.
Heat 2 tbsp olive oil in a large sauté pan, then add the chilli paste, green chilli and tomato purée. Cook for 7 minutes, stirring frequently, until soft and fragrant. Add the tomatoes, stock, 200ml water, sugar, half the coriander, 1¼ tsp of salt and a good grind of pepper and bring to the boil. Lower the heat and simmer for 15 minutes, then keep warm until needed (or cool and re-heat later).
Meanwhile, make the koftas. Finely chop the fish into ½-1cm pieces. Put them into a large bowl with the scallions, dill, chilli, lemon zest, egg, panko, the rest of the coriander, the remaining caraway and cumin, 1 tsp of salt and plenty of black pepper and mix well to combine. Form into 12 round fish cakes, pressing to compact them so they don’t fall apart.
Heat 1½ tbsp of oil in a large frying pan over a medium-high heat. Add half the koftas and cook for 2½ minutes on each side, or until golden. Transfer to a plate, then repeat with the rest of the koftas.
Bring the sauce to a simmer. Add the koftas, then turn the heat to medium low and cook for 10 minutes. Leave to sit for 5 minutes, then serve with the extra dill.
(Original recipe from Ottolenghi Test Kitchen, Shelf Love by Noor Murad & Yotam Ottolenghi, Ebury Press, 2021.)

Leave a comment