One of the great successes over the Christmas period was the gravadlax my dad made. Cured in salt, sugar and dill for 5 days, it had a beautiful flavour and the four of us ate an entire side with our fingers, as Dad sliced wafer-thin strips for us. We never bother with the sweet mustard sauce, as we like it perfectly as it is. I managed to snaffle some to take home with me; some was eaten as is and the rest went into a warm salad.
A bunch of multicoloured beetroot was roasted so that its flavour intensified, its earthy nutty sweetness shining through. Toasted walnuts were given an extra oomph with the use of walnut oil in the dressing and curls of gravadlax draped on top. This all nestled in the peppery rocket; it makes a great starter, or a wintry main course salad. I know, I know, winter and salad shouldn't be uttered in the same sentence, but after a few days of meaty indulgences it hit the spot.
Gravadlax, Beetroot & Walnut Salad
Serves 2 as a starter, 1 as a main
200gr gravadlax
1 bunch (about 250gr) of beetroot - I used multicoloured, but you don't have to
2 tbsp olive oil
2 handfuls of rocket
1 handful of walnuts
3 tbsp walnut oil
1 tbsp white wine vinegar
Salt & pepper
Preheat the oven to 200 degrees C. Without breaking the skin, toss the beets in the olive oil and roast for 30 - 40 minutes. You should be able to insert a skewer into them easily. Leave to cool.
When cool, peel the beets and slice into quarters. Toast the walnuts lightly in a non-stick frying pan without any oil. To assemble, combine the walnut oil, vinegar and salt and pepper to taste. Toss the beets and the rocket in the dressing and add to a bowl. Scatter the walnuts on top, and lastly top with thinly sliced strips of gravadlax.
ooohh looks delicious! I've always wanted to make gravadlax. Did you see how your Dad made it?
ReplyDeletelooking so great! i made gravlax for Christmas too, it's soo good & perfect as starter, main or snack!
ReplyDeleteThis is exactly the sort of thing I want to be eating this week after a month of over indulgence. Looks great.
ReplyDeleteGravadlax is awesome and sounds like your dad did a mighty fine job! I'd eat that straight too. Merry Christmas and here's to a well fed 2011! x
ReplyDeleteThat is a beautiful looking piece of gravadlax and exactly the sort of thing I'm hankering for at the moment. Wintry flavours, rich textures and not a shred of turkey or stuffing in sight.
ReplyDeletelovely! and will you be sharing your Dad's gravadlax recipe w us, too? x shayma
ReplyDeleteNice work Daddy Hollow Legs. I made some too over chrimbo flavoured with grapefruit, basil and star anise, bloody lovely it was.
ReplyDeleteAnd where do you stand on the whole spelling? I tend to use 'gravlax'
Home-made gravadlax, that is DAMN impressive! Just the thing for a January detox, I am definitely making this this week...probably with shop-bought gravadlax though.. x
ReplyDeleteFood Urchin: My Danish friend used to call it 'gravlax' but I've always seen it spelled gravadlax.
ReplyDeleteBoooo to beetroot! I shall find something else to provide the sweetness... *slinks off*.
ReplyDelete