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It’s hard to find a combination better than freshly caught trout, freshly picked morel mushrooms and crisply fried bacon.
Trout with morels is a classic for a reason, with or without bacon: They can both be picked on the same trip outside, and trout fried in bacon grease is, with or without the morels, one of the great culinary delights of spring.
This recipe is a pared-down, more sensible and less fussy version of a similar trout with morels recipe I published back in 2013. You will no longer find that recipe here. I 86’d it because, well, I’d rather you actually make my recipes than just look at them. The old version had bracken fern and ramps and sorrel and was garnished with violets. Cheffy.
I’m just not that guy anymore. More and more I am inclined toward less fussy food, to finding recipes that give you a great eating experience without having to somehow procure ingredients even a Michelin-starred restaurant might have trouble finding.
Nope, everything in this recipe is easily obtained — except for the morels. Those you have to find, or buy at exorbitant rates in a fancy market. Or, do as I did, supplement a meager days’ haul of morels with small shiitake mushrooms, which are meatier than morels and work well as backup player.
This recipe is still an ode to spring, however: peas, trout, morels, fresh spring herbs. Plus bacon, glorious bacon. They’re all cooked in the same pan you cooked the bacon in, so you don’t even blow up the kitchen.
What’s the result? Damn good.
Crispy trout skin and bacon. Deep, chewy savoriness from the mushrooms, balanced with sweet peas and fragrant, slightly bitter herbs. A splash of lemon brightens everything up. You find yourself choosing different bites with each forkful: Trout and a mushroom, bacon and peas, trout and onions, etc.
I served this with simply cooked wild rice, but any rice, or wheat berries, or hell, bread, or new fingerling potatoes, would be fine. Enjoy!
Trout with Morels
Ingredients
- 4 slices bacon, ideally thick cut
- 1 medium onion, sliced root to tip
- 4 small trout, whole or beheaded (guts and gills removed)
- Salt
- 1 1/2 cups fine cornmeal or flour
- 1/2 pound morel mushrooms
- 1/2 pound shiitake or other mushrooms
- 1 cup fresh or frozen peas
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped parsley
- 1/2 teaspoon dried or fresh thyme
- Juice of a lemon
Instructions
- In a large frying pan, ideally cast iron, cook the bacon over medium-low heat until crispy. Remove and cut into batons and set aside. Turn the oven to "warm" and set a wire rack over a baking sheet inside; this is to keep the trout warm.
- While the bacon is cooking, salt the trout inside and out. When the bacon is done, coat the fish in fine cornmeal. Turn the heat in the pan to medium-high. When it's good and hot, fry the trout in batches until they are crispy and cooked through, about 6 to 8 minutes per side. You will likely need to lower the heat on the fish at some point -- the key is to listen: The frying trout should sound just like the bacon. A happy sizzle. When they're done, carefully move the trout to the rack in the oven. I do this with two spatulas.
- Put the onions in the frying pan and saute for a few minutes, until they soften and begin to brown a little. Add the mushrooms and toss to combine. Saute until they begin to give up their water, about 3 minutes, and then jack the heat up to high. Let everything sit for a minute to get a bit of a crust, then toss to combine.
- Add the peas, the bacon batons, parsley and thyme and toss to combine. Cook just until the peas are warm, about a minute. Serve all this as a bed for the trout and squeeze some lemon over everything right as you serve.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.