Gravad Lax
Grrrrrgh!
Course : Seafoods
From: HungryMonster.com
Serves: 3
 

Ingredients:

  Amount  Measure       Ingredient -- Preparation Method
--------  ------------  --------------------------------
   1      small         salmon -- whole
   2                    -- about up to 3 lbs
                        -----Swedish recipe I-----
   2      tablespoons   white peppercorns -- (or a mixture of
   1      parts         white -- peppercorns and
                        berries)
   4      tablespoons   salt
   2      tablespoons   sugar
   2                    dill bunches
                        -----Swedish recipe II-----
     1/4  cup           salt
   3      tablespoons   sugar
   2      tablespoons   pepper -- white
   4      teaspoons     allspice
   3      tablespoons   gin
   2                    dill bunches
                        -----English recipe I-----
   2      tablespoons   salt
   2      tablespoons   sugar
   3      tablespoons   peppercorns -- white
   2                    dill bunches
                        -----English recipe II-----
     2/3  cup           salt
     1/2  cup           sugar
  20                    peppercorns -- white
                        -----maitre'd sauce-----
   3      tablespoons   mustard -- dark, French,
                        -- coarse-ground
   1      tablespoon    sugar
     1/2  teaspoon      salt
   1      pinch         white pepper -- ground
   1      tablespoon    vinegar
   6      tablespoons   olive oil
   6      tablespoons   dill
 

Preparation:

Get a whole fish, clean it and remove the head. Split into two filets, removing the backbone but leave the skin on. Dry off the filets and remove all the little bones. Crush the peppers and seasonings in a mortar, add the salt and sugar. Mix well and press the mixture into the filets. In a glass or ceramic dish, put some dill on the bottom, then one of the filets, skin side down, then more dill, then the other filet, skin side up. Put the thick side of one filet against the other's thin side. Cover with plastic wrap (NOT ALUMINUM FOIL) and put a cutting board or similar on top with some weight on it (e.g. a couple of beer cans). Put it in the refrigerator for a day or so. (Thin filets are ready in 1 day, thicker in 2 days.) Turn the filet over once or twice during this time. Pour off the brine, otherwise the fish will be too salty. The fish will keep for a week in a refrigerator after pouring off the brine. Make the sauce, Maitre'd sauce. Mix together the mustard, sugar, salt, pepper and vinegar. Add the oil drop by drop as if making a mayonnaise. Add the dill. Let the sauce sit for about 10 minutes. Cut off either thin (nearly horizontal) slices, or thick vertical slices, to taste. (Don't cut through the skin). Serve as an appetizer on thin slices of buttered rye bread (with a little lemon juice and some finely chopped dill), or as a main dish with boiled new potatoes and Maitre'd sauce. NOTES: * Swedish dill-cured salmon -- Gravlax uses a salt-sugar mixture to cure the fish. The fish is flavored by dill and whatever else is handy. (I've used gin, Julia Child has used cognac). I've gathered these versions of the recipe from several sources. From "Ver Cokbok" (the Swedish equivalent of "Joy of Cooking" or "Mrs. Beeton.") From a brochure published by the Swedish Information Service. From a booklet written by Tore Wretman, who owned a major restaurant and has published several cookbooks of his own. Gravlax is like barbecue, a process that you follow, but can vary considerably. Don't skimp on the salt. The proportion of salt to fish is important to preserve the fish. Here are several variations on a single basic recipe. Yield: Serves 3-4. * You can broil or grill thick slices of gravlax. After you've eaten the salmon, you can also cut the skin in thin strips, sear them briefly on the skin side, and serve them as a