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Enjoy the Delicate Taste of Chamomile Tea Salmon

downtonabbeycooks · July 23, 2013 ·

Raise a cup of tea to toast the new Prince.
Raise your cup to toast the new Prince.

Happy days as anglophiles around the world celebrate a royal birth with scones and clotted cream and pots of tea. Today is also a special day for Lord D and myself as we celebrate another year of wedded bliss.

I am safely back at home after an eventful visit with my family out in Western Canada.   While the memories and bug bites will fade, there is much fish in our freezer to remind me of our fishing adventures.  Not too many women would bring a box of fish as carry-on luggage, but cooks will go to great lengths to bring home the best for their families and friends, and colleagues.  I had some of the salmon smoked for me at Billingsgate (in Calgary) while it was still fresh, and already shared a taste with my work colleagues (served up with bagels and cream cheese).  Nothing beats wild salmon.  Read on to learn more about efforts to protect the wild fish of the West Coast.

Today’s savoury dish is Camomile Tea Salmon.  A wonderful recipe from The Salmon Recipes, a cookbook I discovered on our fishing adventure to Prince Rupert.

Saving our Salmon

Wonderful cookbook available for purchase online.
Lovely cookbook & stories with recipes for salmon, halibut, and other fish is available to buy online.

Prince Rupert is located on the northern coast of British Columbia.  It is not far from Alaska, and if you have taken an Alaskan cruise, your ship may have actually stopped in  in Prince Rupert for the day. As you recall it was founded by Charles Hays whose death on Titanic resulted in Lord Grantham’s financial demise:  Charles also headed the Grand Trunk Railway.

A lovely little community connected to the ocean.  As I mentioned above I discovered this cookbook–edited by Luanne Roth–when we were buying our fishing licenses at Bobs on the Rocks, a local institution.  This great book prepared by the Prince Rupert Environmental Society provides unexpectedly wonderful recipes for salmon and whitefish from cooks who draw their meals from the sea on a weekly, even daily basis.  The book is also sprinkled with lovely anecdotes about the communities connected to the sea.

The 2006 documentary Call From the Coast (you can download a copy) reveals the negative impact fish farms have on wild salmon. There is even a cameo by Jim Robertson, our family friend and charter operator (Hot Spot Charters) who spoke on behalf of the sport fishing charters in the area.  We actually stopped to visit the Tobboggan Creek Fish Hatchery in Smithers where salmon are incubated to be released. The area won their battle to keep fish farms out of the Skeena estuary, and now raising the alarm over plans to pipe toxic bitumen from Alberta tar sands to then supertanker it out from Kitimat or Prince Rupert.

Sales of this cookbook help the community in their efforts to protect their coastal water and wild fish.  Click to learn more about the organization.

Chamomile Tea Salmon

LavenderSalmon2
A quick and elegant salmon cooked Downton style.

The photo of this recipe graces the cover of The Salmon Recipes, a perfectly suited recipe for a Downton dinner, incorporating chamomile tea and lavender for a delicately flavoured dish.  We have prepared a fish dish with lavender before, using halibut.  The lovely flavour adds a decidedly English touch to celebrate the birth of the new Prince.  This recipe was graciously provided by Chef Jimmy King who is a private chef catering to a select Crawley type clientele.


Delicately Flavored Chamomile Tea Salmon

Tea is a wonderful cooking ingredient.  Incorporating chamomile tea and lavender in this fish dish, results in a delicately flavoured dish.   
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Prep Time 30 minutes mins
Cook Time 10 minutes mins
Total Time 1 hour hr
Course Main Course, Main Dish
Cuisine Edwardian, English
Servings 4 servings

Ingredients
  

  • 4 – 6 pounds salmon fillet
  • 3 tbsp. loose leaf chamomile tea
  • 3 tbsp. honey (lavender if you can find it)
  • 1 large lemon juiced
  • 1 large lemon sliced
  • 4 cloves garlic finely chopped
  • 2 tbsp. piedmont chili pepper or paprika
  • 3 tbsp. olive oil
  • 1 tbsp. lavender
  • 2 tbsp. Fresh flat-leaf parsley chopped
  • 1 pinch sea salt and crushed pepper to taste
Get Recipe Ingredients

Instructions
 

  • Clean and debone salmon filets
  • Steep tea in 1 cup of boiling water for 10 minutes and set aside.
  • In a large shallow dish, prepare the salmon by dusting with paprika, sprinkling with salt and pepper and the garlic. Drizzle with the honey, rub in the olive oil and lemon juice to combine the flavours. Let sit for 20 minutes.
  • Preheat oven to 400F.
  • Transfer the salmon to a baking sheet, lined with parchment paper, skin side down.  Bake the salmon for 10 minutes or until the flesh flakes lightly.  Cover with tin foil and let the salmon rest 5 minutes.
  • Garnish with lemon slices, lavender, and parsley.  Pour the condensed tea around the fish as it’s sauce.
  • Remove the skin, and cut into six ounce portions and serve.
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Filed Under: *About the Show, Main Course Tagged With: afternoon tea, baking salmon with chamomile tea, Downton Abbey, Downton Abbey Cookbook, Edwardian cooking, fish farms, food history, Prince Rupert Environmental Society, salmon, Save our Salmon, The Salmon Recipes cookbook

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About me

I am Pamela Foster. Food historian. Wife. Downton and Gilded Age fan. Foodie.

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