Skip to main content
The Global FlyFisher has recently been updated to a new publishing system, and there may be a few glitches while the last bits get fixed. If you meet anything that doesn't work, please let me know.
Martin - martin@globalflyfisher.com

Fish cakes

A traditional Danish course that tastes heavenly! We have meatballs, and this is the fish variation of that dish.

2 comments

We also call them fish meat balls

This is actually a classical Danish dish. I was taught how to make it by my grandfather, whose ways of cooking was one of the very best things he left me. A fine man altogether... well, that's an other story.

Fish meat balls... known as fish cakes to most people... most Danes consider fish meat balls something you buy in the local supermarket. They're packed four and four in plastic, and look like plastic, but don't taste like plastic. Their taste reminds you more of the smell on a fishing peer than the smell of fresh fish. The dough used to make them is extremely finely ground, completely hiding the structure of whatever little fish there might be in them. No wonder so few people like them.

My fish meat balls are made from fresh, gound or chopped fish, and taste like they should: of fresh fish.
You need:

  • 0.5 kilogram (1 lb.) of lean fish fillet without bones. Cod or similar white fish is best, but you can also use trout or pike or mix species.
  • One large or two small eggs
  • One large onion
  • Cream or milk (approx. 1 cup)
  • A bit of water
  • Flour (a few table spoons)
  • Salt, pepper, nutmeg
  • Butter and/or olive oil for frying
  1. You can grind the fish in a grinder - only once! Nowadays I rarely do this. I chop the fish with a sharp knife in stead
  2. Put the fish in a bowl
  3. Grind or chop the onion too or - even better - shred with a shredder into the bowl
  4. Add a teaspoon of salt, some pepper and half a teaspoon of ground nutmeg and stir
  5. Add the egg(s) and stir
  6. Add a bit of the flour and stir
  7. Add a bit of water - a couple of tablespoons
  8. Add all of the cream or milk and stir
  9. Add a bit more flour at a time, till the dough is suitable for setting like meat balls on a frying pan
  10. Let the stuff rest for 30 minutes
  11. Add more flour or milk if needed
  12. Heat a frying pan with mixed butter and oil on it
  13. Form the meat balls in one hand using a large table spoon.
  14. Set the meat balls in the hot butter
  15. Cook them for approx. 5 minutes on each side over fairly high heat. They must be brown and have a crust
  16. Serve with potatoes (mashed are very good), melted butter and sauce de remoulade

You can vary this recipe in many ways. The easy one is mixing the species of fish. Use cod as the main ingredient, but add a bit of roughyl chopped trout or salmon. It's looks beautiful, and tastes very well. You might stir in some chopped leek too. the green/pink/white of these meat balls is a feat to the eyes.

In the winter you often get cod with egg sacks in them. Remove the eggs carefully from the sacks and mix carefully into the finished dough based on pure cod. It looks nice and tastes very well.
These meat balls also taste very well cold, vut into slices on rye or wheat bread.

Sufyan,

I use cod or pollack - both saltwater fish with lean, white meat and not very expensive.
Most white fish will do - freshwater or saltwater.

Martin

Submitted by sufyan nasiri on

Permalink

how do i choose the species of fish suitable for that? we have many spp. in yemen.some with red meat .others wuth white meat. others fich high price while others with low price.

Since you got this far …


The GFF money box

… I have a small favor to ask.

Long story short

Support the Global FlyFisher through several different channels, including PayPal.

Long story longer

The Global FlyFisher has been online since the mid-90's and has been free to access for everybody since day one – and will stay free for as long as I run it.
But that doesn't mean that it's free to run.
It costs money to drive a large site like this.
See more details about what you can do to help in this blog post.