Red Snapper en Papillote

  4.7 – 45 reviews  • Easy Baking
Level: Easy
Total: 55 min
Prep: 25 min
Cook: 30 min
Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients

  1. 1 cup couscous
  2. 1 (2-pound) whole red snapper, cleaned, head on
  3. 2 teaspoons salt, plus pinch for couscous
  4. 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  5. 1 small bunch fresh oregano
  6. 1 small bunch fresh parsley
  7. 1 whole lemon, thinly sliced
  8. 1 cup thinly sliced red onion
  9. 2 teaspoons minced garlic
  10. 1 cup halved grape tomatoes
  11. 1 cup drained and quartered artichoke hearts
  12. 1/2 cup white wine
  13. 1 tablespoon butter

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F.
  2. Rinse couscous in fine mesh strainer, under cold water, lay out on parchment lined baking sheet and sprinkle with pinch of salt. Set aside. Cut parchment paper into 15 by 48-inch sheet. Fold in 1/2 and lay on baking/cookie sheet. Unfold and lay snapper diagonally on sheet pan on top of 1 layer of parchment. Salt and pepper fish, inside and out. Place herbs inside cavity of fish along with 1/2 of lemon, and 1/2 of red onion. Arrange couscous next to fish on all sides. Put garlic, and remaining lemon and red onion on fish and lay tomatoes and artichoke hearts around outside of couscous, creating somewhat of a wall. Pour wine over fish and dot with butter. Fold over edges of parchment paper, stapling if necessary, to create and almost airtight seal. Bake in oven for 30 minutes. Carefully open and serve (be aware of bones in the fish).

Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 of 4 servings
Calories 507
Total Fat 7 g
Saturated Fat 3 g
Carbohydrates 50 g
Dietary Fiber 8 g
Sugar 4 g
Protein 56 g
Cholesterol 92 mg
Sodium 215 mg

Reviews

Ariana Maldonado DDS
This was delicious!! I didn’t use. Whole red snapper but it worked beautifully with 2 fillets.
Melanie Scott
It smelled wonderful and it tasted ok. It was missing a lot of flavor.
Vanessa Adams
I utilized Alaskan Pacific halibut in place of snapper. It is excellent.
John Hughes
I am giving it 3 star because the fish was cooked. However, it was tasteless cooked fish. No flavor. Couscous was dry and crispy everywhere.  I have sprinkled olive oil around couscous but still some parts were dried. Who wants to eat crispy couscous? If you make this dish, make sure to put a lot of butter and olive oil on top of couscous. Also, not sure why you need tomatoes (sour) + artichoke hearts (sour again) then lemons (sour). It was sour crispy mess.
Ashley Gutierrez
Just follow the directions and it is perfect!
Nicole Perry
Gem of a recipe. Thanks for sharing!
Gabriel Ortiz
Great recipe. Very flavorful, light, and extremely nutritious. I, too, used olive oil in lieu of butter. Also added red and yellow peppers. Used a very fresh whole red snapper from Whole Foods. My foodie teenage daughter loved it, as did my eight-year-old. Highly recommended.
Kevin Rhodes
This is an awesome meal! Easy, cooked perfectly! Yummy! Thank you!
Melissa Velez
I love this method of cooking and I think it is especially
suited for fish. fish has the shortest window between undercooked and overcooked. This method makes perfectly cooked fish easy to do. I like to leave the ‘boats’ unopened for about 5-10 mns to continue the poaching/steaming which will finish if the fish were undercooked and will not overcook even a perfectly cooked fish.

I prefer to use aluminum instead of parchment , conceeding that it lacks the elegance of parchment. Also, I like to use filets
and spoon in helping of tomato concasse with generous morrocan seasoning…. ras el hanut,,, harrissa. etc. Futhermore, we precook the couscous and let our guests spoon it into their individual ‘boat’

Ricky Larson
We had this for dinner. I didn’t have artichoke but I used chopped capers. I also didn’t have fresh oregano so I left it out. My husband felt that the fish didn’t shine through all the herbs. I liked all the herbs and preferred the fish to be more subtle. I rated it a 4 because it didn’t wow us but that could just have been my cooking : I’ve read that fresh oregano has a very different taste than dried so that’s why I left it out. Another comment I got is that the small bones of the fish made it a chore to eat because you had to be careful to not eat a bone. If I made it again, I would just filet the fish. Also, I didn’t enjoy the tomato halves…maybe smaller pieces so it cooks down a lot or leave them out. I would mix in some olive oil and the herbs with the couscous because it cooked into a small cake on the bottom.

 

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