Fresh tuna, vegetables and noodles with dill, marjoram and thyme (serves 2)
00:09
This
fresh tuna and noodle recipe is great for a quick light dinner. You can use
whatever vegetables you have available and whatever herbs you like. And I
suppose whatever fish you have. No, actually, stick with the tuna, otherwise it will be a
different dish.
This
is the first year I’m growing marjoram in my garden. I always grow lots of
different herbs, but I’ve overlooked marjoram for much too long. It is a close
relative of one of my big herbal loves Oregano, maybe slightly more delicate,
but equally lovely. I thought I’d try it with this new tuna invention, because
it is growing beautifully whereas my oregano is looking a bit dodgy.
I
also picked some fresh thyme, which is another herb I love. I don’t think I
have anything but love for most herbs to be honest. The thyme and marjoram
mixture smelled absolutely gorgeous when I was chopping it. Both fresh oregano
and marjoram have this potent,
petrol-like smell. I love the smell of petrol.
It
reminds me of my grandfather’s basement where he kept petrol for his little
boat that he’d drive to his island cabin. I’m sure all fire safety regulations
were carefully observed particularly as the wood heated sauna also resided in
the basement. Seriously, it’s a mystery we didn’t all blow up to kingdom come
one Saturday night.
Granddad
also kept his potatoes in the basement. They had a little potato field that
probably gave them enough to get through the winter. My granddad was a
businessman, but no money on a bank account is ever the same as potatoes in the
basement for a Finn. I must confess I always try to keep a couple of bags in
the bottom drawer of my fridge. Anything
may happen, EU might collapse, Labour might win (just kidding), Russia
regularly goes crazy in some way that
will make life difficult for Finns, but
as long as you have potatoes it’ll be ok.
So
anyway, great combination, potatoes and petrol. I used to sneak down to the
basement to sniff around a bit with my big brother as my bodyguard, because it
was dark and scary there. This was the nice big brother, the other one would
probably have put a spider down my back and locked me in there as his idea of a
joke. He also used to tell me bedtime
stories about plutonium and Idi Amin. We called him “The Personality Disorder”.
Fresh tuna, vegetables and noodles with dill, marjoram and thyme recipe (serves 2)
2 nests of whole wheat noodles (or whatever noodle you like)
300g fresh tuna steak
2 shallots
1/3 orange bell pepper
1/3 yellow bell pepper
1/3 courgette
¼ cup whte wine
½ cup water
Handful of broccoli florets
Handful of string beans
2 Spring onions
Salt
Pepper or lemonpepper
Juice and zest of ½ lime
Dash of soy
2-3 tbsp of chopped fresh herbs
Cook the noodles according to pack instruction and rinse
with cold water to stop the cooking.
Cut the tuna in chunks and place in a bowl, add salt,
pepper, lime zest and juice, soy and herbs. Mix and leave to marinade while you
prep the vegetables (I left this in the fridge for a couple of hours
marinading). Chop the shallots finely, chop the rest of the vegetables roughly.
Heat oil in a pan, add the onion, peppers and courgette, fry
until they start to soften. Add the rest of the vegetables. Once all start to
look kind of half way cooked add white wine and once it’s evaporated add the
water. If you want your tuna cooked through add it when the vegetables still
need a minute, add the noodles at the same time and cook until vegetables and
tuna are done and noodles are heated through. If you want the tuna raw in the
middle, add the noodles first and only add the tuna when the vegetable are more
or less done. Then cook until the surface of the fish is browned.
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