Red Snapper
Submitted by peggy1
Baked red snapper fillets in a spicy tomato-chili sauce with zucchini, bell peppers, and celery. A lean, flavor-packed Southwestern-style seafood dinner.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
5 minCOOK
1 hrsREADY
1 hrsThis red snapper gets baked under a blanket of chunky vegetables and a slow-simmered tomato sauce loaded with green chilies, cumin, and coriander. It’s got a Veracruz-meets-Southwest thing going on, and the results are lean, bright, and full of heat.
The sauce builds flavor over an hour of simmering. Tomato juice, garlic, onions, oregano, basil, and chili powder cook down into a concentrated base before it ever touches the fish. That long simmer is doing real work, melding the herbs and softening the chilies so the sauce coats evenly instead of tasting like raw spice.
Zucchini, red bell pepper, and celery go straight into the baking dish with the fish, so they cook in the sauce and come out tender but not mushy. The snapper itself only needs about 25 minutes in the oven. It’s done when it flakes easily with a fork and the vegetables are just soft.
Chef Tips
- Don’t skip the full hour of simmering the sauce. Rushing it means raw-tasting garlic and harsh chili flavor. You want everything smooth and blended.
- Cut vegetables into uniform one-inch pieces so they cook at the same rate as the fish.
- Use fresh green chilies, not canned. Fresh peppers have a cleaner heat and better texture in the sauce.
- Check the fish at 20 minutes. Snapper fillets vary in thickness, and overcooked snapper turns dry and rubbery fast.
Variations
- Swap the fish: Tilapia, cod, or mahi-mahi all work here. Adjust baking time based on fillet thickness.
- Extra heat: Add a diced jalapeno or a pinch of cayenne to the sauce for more kick.
Ingredients
Directions
Place juice, garlic and chopped onions in saucepan and bring to simmer.
Add all the herbs and chilies and continue to simmer 1 hour.
Cut fillets into 4 ounce servings and place in baking dish .
Add vegetable pieces to fish. Cover with sauce.
Bake 25 minutes at 400℉ (200℃).
Garnish with parsley and lemon.
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