The first step is to combine:
2 T sugar
1 T chili powder
1 t black pepper
1/2 T [1 1/2 t] ground cumin
1/2 T paprika
1/2 T salt [Dan and I both omit]
1/4 t dry mustard
Dash of cinnamon [I used 1/16 t]
Ed grills the fish on a gas grill, on low heat with the cover down. He places the salmon on aluminum foil, skin-side down, rub-side up and cooks for ~10 minutes until the fish is ~120 degrees. After he removes the fish from the grill the tempertaure continues to rise to ~125 degrees. He previously cooked it, based on the "fish setting" on our thermometer to ~130 degrees (135 by the time it reached the table). We've recently gone rarer based on Harold McGee's recommendation in On Food and Cooking: "In general, fish and shellfish are firm but still moist when cooked to 130 - 140 degrees F.... Some dense-fleshed fish, including tuna and salmon are especially succulent at 120 degrees F, when still slightly translucent and jelly-like. ...some fish, Atlantic salmon, for example - can develop an almost custard-like texture if heated gently to 120 degrees F...."* We have achieved this custard-like texture but so far only with King Salmon.
* Pages 209 and 211
June 2013: This is an excellent rub for shrimp too!
* Pages 209 and 211
June 2013: This is an excellent rub for shrimp too!
Grilled Scallions
Serves 2, scale accordingly
Wash, trim and dry
3 large or 6 small scallions.
If the scallions are large, slice then in half vertically. Lightly coat with
olive oil
and grill until soft but not charred.
July 2013: The salmon arrived and what a treat! Better than the fresh sockeye we have been getting in the local market.
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