Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

Share your review and contribute to our community!

Save and access your favourite recipes and products.

Enter the email address associated with your account, and we’ll email you a link to reset your password.

Password Strength

Must contain at least

*Enter your email to receive news and exclusive offers from Jamie Oliver Limited about Jamie's businesses, including books, TV shows, restaurants, products, commercial partners and campaigning activities. By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use . Learn how we collect, use and share your data in our Privacy Policy .

Cart item

Just Added

View bag
Red mullet recipe
Save recipe

Pan-fried red mullet with crispy breadcrumbs & a herby tomato salad

With a hum of dried chilli

Red mullet recipe
Save recipe

25 mins
Not Too Tricky

serves 4

About the recipe

Tomatoes and red mullet just seem to have the most incredible harmony and, as bizarre as breadcrumbs might sound, their surprising crunch with such a fresh and flaky fish will really tickle your fancy.

Remember: only a fool would want to make a tomato salad in Britain out of season. Early summer to October is the best time. Make some effort when you buy the tomatoes, and have a look around for green, yellow and cherry tomatoes, a whole mixture. Get some good ones and this dish will blow you away.


nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Salt

g

Protein

g

Carbs

g

Fibre

of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Cook with Jamie

Cook with Jamie

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

8 red mullet fillets (100g each), scaled and pin-boned, from sustainable sources

plain flour, for dusting

olive oil

TOMATO SALAD

3 big handfuls of mixed-colour tomatoes

extra virgin olive oil

red wine vinegar

½ a bunch of fresh basil (15g)

½ a bunch of fresh dill (15g), or fennel tops

CRISPY BREADCRUMBS

4 sprigs of fresh thyme

200g stale breadcrumbs

2 dried red chillies

1 lemon

Top Tip

If you want to take this recipe up a notch buy yourself some smoked paprika and mix a tablespoon with your flour at the very beginning. Check out the Spanish flavours – very nice.

Method

Tomatoes and red mullet just seem to have the most incredible harmony and, as bizarre as breadcrumbs might sound, their surprising crunch with such a fresh and flaky fish will really tickle your fancy. Remember: only a fool would want to make a tomato salad in Britain out of season. Early summer to October is the best time. Make some effort when you buy the tomatoes, and have a look around for green, yellow and cherry tomatoes, a whole mixture. Get some good ones and this dish will blow you away.

  1. Chop the tomatoes into irregular chunks and tip into a big bowl with a couple of glugs of extra virgin olive oil and a splash of vinegar.
  2. Season the tomatoes with sea salt and black pepper, then taste, tweak, taste, tweak... I usually add a bit more vinegar, salt or extra virgin olive oil until the tomatoes and their juices sing in my mouth. This is a normal thing to do, so just be confident!
  3. Pick and finely chop the basil and dill and mix into the tomatoes.
  4. Season the fish fillets, then dip them in a little flour to dust them on both sides, shaking off any excess.
  5. Drizzle a glug of olive oil into a frying pan over a medium-high heat and, once hot, place the fish skin-side down in the pan, lightly pressing the fillets down using a fish slice.
  6. Fry the fish for 3 minutes, or until the skin is bright orangey golden and crisp. Turn the fish over and fry for 1 minute on the other side, or until just cooked. Remove the fish to a plate while you make the crispy breadcrumbs.
  7. Drizzle a little olive oil to the juices in the pan, then strip in the thyme leaves, add the breadcrumbs, crumble up the chilli and finely grate in the lemon zest. Toss around and fry for 3 to 4 minutes, or until lightly golden and crispy.
  8. Divide the tomato salad between four plates and either lay 2 fish fillets over the top of each salad, or break the fillets up and scatter over the tomatoes. I like to put the hot and crispy breadcrumbs in a little bowl with a teaspoon in them and sprinkle it over my guests’ plates at the table – delicious.

Tags

Recipes you may like

related features