Skip to main content

Baked Potatoes, Salt Cod, and Parsley

A beautiful marriage of textures, this: creamy salt cod purée and crisp potato skins. As baked potatoes go, this is a lot of work, and much washing up too, but the result is worth the trouble. Salt cod is not easy to track down; Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese markets and major supermarkets are your best bet. The recipe makes rather too much filling, but it is not worth dealing with a smaller quantity of salt cod. There’s no hardship anyway—simply keep the leftover purée in the fridge and eat it the next day with fingers of hot toast.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    enough for 2

Ingredients

dried salt cod – 1 pound (500g)
large baking potatoes – 2
milk – 2/3 cup (150ml)
extra-virgin olive oil – 2/3 cup (150ml)
a large garlic clove
the juice of a lemon
parsley – a small bunch, chopped

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Soak the salt cod in cold water for a good twenty-four hours, changing the water regularly.

    Step 2

    Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C). After scrubbing the potatoes well and pricking them here and there with a fork, put them in to bake. Once they have been baking for half an hour or so, drain the fish, put it in a deep pan, cover it with fresh cold water, then bring to a boil. When the water is bubbling, turn off the heat and cover the pan with a lid. Let it sit for fifteen minutes, then drain. Remove and discard the bones and skin. A messy job, and one of the few kitchen jobs for which I will put on a pair of rubber gloves. Put the salt cod into a food processor. Warm the milk (I use the steam nozzle on the coffee machine) and the olive oil separately.

    Step 3

    Peel and coarsely chop the garlic and add it to the fish. Blitz, pouring in the milk and olive oil in a steady stream, letting the mixture whip to a sloppy cream.

    Step 4

    Remove the potatoes from the oven, slit them open, and scoop out the flesh with a teaspoon, then add it to the salt cod. Blitz briefly to mix, then add the lemon juice, the chopped parsley leaves, and a few grinds of the pepper mill. Pile the purée into the potato skins and return to the hot oven for fifteen minutes.

Tender
Read More
Like miso-peanut hibachi chicken and spring orzotto.
A crowd-friendly, crisp-edged chicken and vegetable rice from chef José Andrés.
Like José Andrés’s paella and not one but two chicken stir-fries.
Keep this easy frittata recipe on hand for quick breakfasts, impressive brunches, and fridge clean-out meals.
The magic of this hibachi chicken recipe comes from a combination of miso and peanut butter and how it beautifully caramelizes when it hits the grill.
Chicken breasts reach their full potential in this spicy, saucy stir-fry with blistered green beans.
This one-pot dinner cooks chicken thighs directly on top of a bed of flavorful cilantro rice studded with black beans for a complete dinner.
Turn humble onions into this thrifty yet luxe pasta dinner.