Fish Molee/Fish Stew with Coconut Milk

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(from Presi’s recipe box)

Fish molee is a very light fish stew, flavored with coconut milk. Maybe the name ‘molee’ is derived from the spanish word “mole” which means stew. Central kerala had a flourishing trade with the Portugese in the olden times, so a cultural exchange and local ingredients may have resulted in this recipe.

Source: http://malluspice.blogspot.com/2006/10/blog-post_11.html

Categories: Curry

Ingredients

  • Pompano/Pomfret/King Fish/ Fish Fillets- 1 lb or 1/2 kg
  • Turmeric- 1/4 tsp
  • Red chili powder-1 tsp
  • Lime/Lemon Juice-1tbsp
  • Salt- 1/2 tsp
  • Oil- 3 tbsp
  • For the Stew:
  • Onion- 1or 2.
  • Green chilies- 6
  • Ginger-1/2 piece
  • Garlic- 1 clove
  • Tomato-1/2 tomato
  • Coriander powder- 1/2 tsp
  • Fresh Ground Pepper- 1tsp
  • Salt to taste
  • Thick Coconut Milk – 1/2 cup
  • Very thin coconut Milk- 1 cup (Dilute the thick milk with water)
  • Lime Juice or Vinegar-1/2 tsp
  • Curry leaves- 1 sprig
  • Coconut oil or Canola oil- 1or 2 tbsp

Directions

  1. Preparing the Fish: Clean and slice the fish. Wash it and toss with lime juice. Pat dry the fish with paper towels and marinate with the salt, chili powder and turmeric for at least 15 minutes outside the refrigerator.

  2. Heat the oil in a shallow pan till medium hot and gently pan fry the fish fillets for about a minute or two on each side, just until it changes color and firms up. This step can be skipped if the fish is very delicate or if you are using skinless fish fillets. Drain onto paper towels and keep aside.

  3. If using fresh or frozen grated coconut, make two extractions of coconut milk. First extract 1/2 cup and then second 1 cup. Thin coconut milk is the second extraction with shredded fresh coconut and water which is considerably thinner than the thick milk from the first extraction. Keep aside. Slice ginger, garlic and onions. Slit the green chilies and chop the tomato into quarters.

  4. Stew: Heat oil in a pan and sauté sliced onions, garlic and ginger, curry leaves. Add the coriander powder and continue stirring for a minute. Add the second extraction of coconut milk, lime juice and salt to taste. The thin diluted coconut milk will not separate, so when it starts to boil, add the sliced fish and cover. Cook on a slow heat for about 5-10 minutes.

  5. When done, add the tomatoes and pepper; check taste and remove from the stovetop. The tomatoes should not get cooked and the pepper added in the end gives it an irresistible aroma.

  6. Ensure that the heat is absolutely low or even off, before adding the thick coconut milk or first extraction of coconut milk. Do not let it come to full boil after that. You could continue simmering for another 5 minutes.

  7. I use the claypot (Meenchatti) which holds the heat and continues the cooking even after I take it off the flame. Remove from fire and serve hot.

  8. This curry’s taste is hinged on the fresh flavors so it may not taste the same the next day. This is not one for the long haul.

  9. P.S. You cold even replace half the coconut milk with low fat milk to reduce the cholesterol factor. If it is good quality coconut milk, once the flavor is set, adding a lot more (for more gravy) will not increase the flavor.

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