Recipes

LIME SARDINES - GRILLED OR BAKED!

share with friends

Lime Sardines - Grilled Or Baked!

The sardines, derivative of Lorenza di Medici, were delicious yesterday, but what will I do with the rest of the sardines?

Finally I decided that I would marinate the sardines this afternoon an..   Read More

 


CATEGORIES

INGREDIENTS

  • 12 sardines (cleaned, headed, and butterflied)
  • Juice of 2 limes
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon Sambal Oelek
  • 1 teaspoon crushed ginger root
  • 2 cloves garlic crushed
  • Chopped coriander to taste
  • Two potatoes (for option 2)

DIRECTIONS

Mix together all the marinade ingredients.


Place the sardines in a bowl.


Pour over the marinade.


Allow to rest in the refrigerator for at least two hours.



For grilled lime sardines:


Heat the grill until it is very hot. Place the sardines on the grill skin side up.


Brush with the marinade.


These should be cooked in about two minutes.


Serve with green salad and olive bread.


Serves two for a main meal, or can be served as part of antipasto.



For baked lime sardines:


Preheat the oven to 180 Celsius.


Peel and chop each of the potatoes into about eight pieces and add to the lime and sardine mixture.


Bake for 80-90 minutes until the potatoes are tender and have absorbed the lime mixture.


You can reduce the cooking time if you partially pre-cook the potatoes but the longer cooking time leads to a real absorption of flavours.


Serve with green salad.


Serves two for a main meal.


RECIPE BACKSTORY

The sardines, derivative of Lorenza di Medici, were delicious yesterday, but what will I do with the rest of the sardines?

Finally I decided that I would marinate the sardines this afternoon and then grill them this evening. I thought about various combinations but then decided to focus my marinade on the limes that I had on hand. Sardines are oily and strong flavoured and need something to balance that. Lime juice should do the trick and I really like lime juice. I finally settled on a combination of lime juice, olive oil, ginger, garlic, coriander and Sambal oelek (hot chilli paste).

Of course, the first trick was to secure the kitchen from the cats who were going berserk about the sardines yesterday ;>) and still aware of something very interesting in the fridge.

Stephanie Alexander suggests always cooking sardines outside because of next day's smell, but I don't have a barbecue so I shall have to bear the consequences, I thought as I prepared the marinade. Then as I was putting the bowl with the sardines and the marinade into the refrigerator, I had an idea.

These would be delicious baked in this marinade with potatoes. So I'll offer two variants for this recipe. And to obviate the need for grill cleaning and a sardine-smelling kitchen, I'll make the baked variant tonight.

RECIPE REVIEWS

May/29/2008 11:05 pm pieman
I think, I'll try this recipe, soon. How many cans do I have to buy, to get the right amount of sardines? does it matter what they're canned in?
May/30/2008 12:05 am polyxena2
These are fresh sardines which have been cleaned, headed and butterflied by the fishmonger. It wouldn't work with canned fish as that is already cooked.

MEDIA

Weekly Recipes and Cookbook Contests!

Need Inspiration? Click Here→Thank
You
Never Miss a Recipe! Sign Up For Our Emails!

© 2006-2013 BakeSpace, Inc. All Rights Reserved