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MELISSA CLARK
NYT Syndicate
There are excellent reasons to cook a whole fish, rather than fillets. The skin and bones add enormous amounts of flavour to the flesh, and they also keep it from drying out, which gives you a wider margin of error.
There are many times, though, when whole fish just can't be on my menu. Like when I am in the mood for salmon, and the entire animal would be too much for my small family, or when I'm serving people who don't like to stare down their dinner.
Most often, though, I choose fillets over whole fish for their cooking speed. There are few things faster and easier than broiling a couple of fillets rubbed with an herb-flecked compound butter.
But there is a solution that marries the convenience of a fillet with the succulence of a whole fish: butterflied trout.
The prep work is simple. Butterflied trout doesn't have bones to maneuver around, and it needn't have the head either. (If yours comes with the head still attached, lop it off with a sharp knife.)
It does still come wrapped in its skin, though, and because the fillets are thin, there is a high skin-to-flesh ratio. Even if you're not fond of eating the skin, its presence intensifies the flavour of the fillets and keeps them nice and juicy. And if you are a fish skin fan, there is more of it to savor, preferably when it's crisp and salty.
The technique for broiled butterflied trout is as simple as it gets. Spread the fish open on a baking pan, season with a little salt and pepper and broil as close to your heat source as possible, until the center of the flesh turns opaque and the edges curl and brown.
You can mix the herb butter together while the fish is in the oven ” that is, as long as you've taken the butter out of the refrigerator in advance so it's soft and supple. Better yet, keep some butter on the counter so you will always have spreadable butter on hand. (It can last for a week or so without refrigeration.)
At this point, all that's left to do is add a final garnish. For a weeknight meal, capers add a nice, inexpensive pop of salinity and crunch.
Or if you want to turn this into something more deluxe for company, sprinkle the fish with trout or salmon roe. The shimmering orange pearls add a similar salty burst but are a lot more elegant ” and it's just as quick for the cook.
Trout With Chive Butter
Yield: 4 servings
Total time: 10 minutes

Ingredients
4 whole trout, butterflied
Fine sea salt, to taste
1 garlic clove, finely grated or minced
1/2 teaspoon fresh lemon or lime juice, more to taste
1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, cubed and softened
1 tablespoon minced chives, more for serving
Trout roe, salmon roe or capers, for serving, optional

Preparation
1. Heat the broiler. Place trout, skin side down, on a rimmed baking sheet. Sprinkle with salt.
2. In a mini food processor, or using a mortar and pestle or a bowl and a fork, stir together garlic, lemon juice, pepper and a pinch of salt. Add softened butter and chives and mash or process until well mixed.
3. Broil trout until just opaque, 2 to 5 minutes depending upon your broiler.
4. Drop spoonfuls of butter on top of the fish; it will melt immediately. Top with more chives and with roe or capers, and a little more lemon juice if you like.
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23/05/2017
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