Salmon with bacon, sweetcorn and crushed potatoes
- Published: 7 Feb 23
- Updated: 18 Mar 24
Inspired by a classic corn chowder, pan-fried salmon is topped with a creamy sauce of salty bacon and sweetcorn. Served with crushed potatoes flecked with fresh spring onions, this dish is pure comfort – and ready in under half an hour.
Browse more salmon fillet recipes.
Ingredients
- 500g new potatoes
- 80g bacon lardons
- 2 salmon fillets (about 260g)
- 100ml white wine
- 100g chicken or vegetable stock
- 80g tinned sweetcorn, drained (drained weight)
- 80ml double cream
- Knob of unsalted butter
- 3 spring onions, finely chopped
- 2 tbsp chopped dill
Method
- Bring a pan of salted water to the boil. Halve the new potatoes and cook them in the boiling water for 15 minutes.
- Meanwhile, put the lardons in a frying pan, then cook over a low-medium heat for 3-5 minutes until crisp. Push them to the side and add the salmon, skin side down. Cook for 4 minutes until the skin is crisp and golden, then gently lift out the salmon and set aside.
- Add the wine and stock to the pan and bring to a simmer. Let it bubble for around 3 minutes until reduced by half, then stir in the sweetcorn and double cream and return the salmon to the pan, skin-side up. The skin should be above the sauce, keeping it nice and crisp. Cook for a few minutes over a medium heat until the liquid has reduced slightly into a nice spoon-coating sauce. Taste and season with cracked black pepper – it may not need salt due to the reduced stock and cured bacon. Keep warm over a very low heat.
- Drain the potatoes and use a potato masher to roughly crush them with the butter, spring onions and a pinch of salt and pepper. Divide between bowls and top with the salmon. Stir the dill into the sauce and drizzle over the top.
- Recipe from February 2023 Issue
Nutrition
- Calories
- 914kcals
- Fat
- 56.9g (22.9g saturated)
- Protein
- 44.5g
- Carbohydrates
- 43.8g (6.2g sugars)
- Fibre
- 6g
- Salt
- 1.6g
delicious. tips
Add lardons to the pan when it’s cold and then gradually bring up the heat – this allows the fat to render out before the exterior dries out. The salmon then cooks in all the lovely rendered fat.
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