Ceviche with Toasted Coconut and Coconut Foam
► by Head Chef Andrés Melo of Brutto Beach House
If you ask Head Chef Andrés Melo how he ended up in Aruba, he’ll tell you he followed the opportunities afforded to him.
— Photography Kenneth Theysen
Ceviche with Toasted Coconut and Coconut Foam
Serves 2
Ceviche
200g raw sea bass
20g passion fruit juice
30g lime juice
50g julienned red onion
16g julienned Aji Rojo pepper
6g cilantro
Coconut Foam
425ml coconut cream
2000ml coconut milk
500g cream
3 gelatin sheets
Ceviche
Cut the raw sea bass fillets into small cubes.
Add sea bass, red onion, Aji Rojo pepper, and cilantro to a small bowl. Mix gently until just combined.
Add passion fruit juice, lime juice, and salt to taste to mixture. Mix gently until the sea bass is coated in liquid.
Plate, garnish, and serve immediately.
Coconut Foam
Rehydrate gelatin sheets in cold water (or as per package instructions).
In a medium saucepan on low heat, mix gelatin, coconut cream, coconut milk,
and cream.Pour the mixture through a sieve into a large mixing bowl to remove any lumps. Let the mixture cool. Mix again with an electric mixer.
Pour liquid into a siphon to create culinary foam.
Serve
Spoon ceviche mixture onto a serving dish.
Top with coconut foam and toasted coconut shavings.
Chef Andrés Melo recommends serving ceviche immediately. “It’s not going to taste as fresh if you leave the fish marinating in the juices for a long period of time,” Melo says.
The coconut foam is optional since not every home cook has a siphon on hand. “The foam is pretty easy to make, but not everyone is willing to buy a siphon,” Melo says. Don’t be afraid of the cooking tool. Melo encourages home cooks to just “experiment with it.” To adopt the spirit of Melo’s philosophy: “Why not? ”.