Poaching Mahi-Mahi is a delicious and easy way to serve this fish and often the technique used at your favorite restaurant to cook Mahi.
It’s often been said that Mahi-Mahi is a powerhouse of healthy protein and no it’s not a dolphin. Although it can be referred to as “dorado or dolphinfish” it’s not a mammal, and dolphin by name only. There’s no need to worry about flipper ending up on your dinner table!
What you will get with Mahi-Mahi is a very lean fish that is chock full of essential amino acids and enzymes. Including Omega-3 fatty acids. And Mahi-Mahi (the fish so nice they named twice) can be cooked a numbers of ways allowing you to have fun creating delicious restaurant-style dishes in your own kitchen.
What Ingredients do I need to Make Poached Mahi-Mahi?
Let’s start by gathering the ingredients we need to make my restaurant style Poached Mahi-Mahi. In Chef Speak this is called the “Mise en Place” which translates to “Everything in its Place”.
Not only does setting your ingredients up ahead of time speed the up cooking process, but it also helps ensure you have everything you need to make the dish.
What other Fish Can I poach?
These are some of my other favorite fish to cook with the poaching method.
- Tuna
- Swordfish
- Halibut
- Barramundi
- Arctic char
- Dover sole
- Salmon
How do I poach Mahi-Mahi?
Poaching fish is easier than you think and a wonderful way to not only cook fish quickly but also helping to keep it moist and flavorful while keeping down the calories.
And the best part is you can cook dinner in one pan! Traditionally a Court-Bouillon is used to poach fish, but don’t get worried it sounds fancier than it really is.
The first step is to rinse and pat dry the mahi-mahi with paper towels. The salt and pepper the fish.
Add a little olive oil to a large heated skillet over medium-high heat. Then add the Mahi-Mahi fillets, garlic and veggies to the pan.
After 1 minute in the hot skillet, gently turn the fillets over and continue cooking for another minute.
How do I make a Court Bouillon?
Remove the Mahi from the skillet and set aside until needed.
Add the white wine, stock and lemon juice to the skillet. Bring the mixture to a boil and allow the stock to reduce by half.
When the court bouillon has reduced by half, strain the mixture removing all of the vegetables.
*Discard the vegetables or season and continue cooking them in a little olive oil to serve with the fish.
If you want a richer broth, you can, of course, let it simmer for a few hours (which would require adding more water to the pan as it cooks away) my dish came out pretty well for using this shortcut method. You can also add some of your favorite fresh herbs to this broth, enhancing the flavors to create your own signature dish.
To make a court-bouillon you need just a few items; celery, carrots, onions, and an acidic ingredient along with other liquids. You can use citrus (lime or lemon), wine, or vinegar. Or a combination of any of the ingredients, I used lemon and white wine. I also added a few garlic cloves, and used vegetable stock instead of just plain water, kicking up the flavor profile even more.
As the court-bouillon reduces, you can enhance the flavors by adding cream, butter or other fresh herbs….. It’s your kitchen, have fun experimenting!
It’s really that easy, and when you think of it the court-bouillon is basically just a mirepoix (cut up celery, onions and carrots, used in many dishes as well as soups). See now you’ve learned more French terms to make bantering around the kitchen even more fun….you’re almost ready for the tall white hat.
Reduce the heat to medium and return the Mahi to the pan along with shrimp, spinach and tomatoes. Sprinkle half the lemon zest on top of the Mahi.
Allow Mahi and other ingredients to continue cooking for 3-4 minutes.
If you’d like to test the fish to see if it’s done insert a very sharp knife into the thickest part of the Mahi to see if it’s done to your liking.
*This fish can be served a little undone. This will keep it from being dry.
Remove the Mahi and shrimp from the pan and plate over prepared rice or your favorite grain.
Dredge a piece of butter into flour and add it to the pan and mix well until blended in. This is called a Beurre Manie and will help thicken the sauce.
Spoon the spinach mixture over the Mahi and rice and enjoy!
**You can peel the shrimp if you like before serving or simply have your guests peel them with the dinner.
More Seafood Recipes You’ll Love!
- Blackened Mahi-Mahi with a Pineapple Lobster Sauce
- Grilled Mahi-Mahi with Caponata
- Pan Seared Halibut
- Red Snapper with a Lobster Cream Sauce
Mama Maggie's Kitchen
My husband loved this dish.
Marina
Poached Mahi Mahi sounds delicious! Love this fish, thanks for sharing
Sara
Oh yum! All those flavors work so well together without sacrificing the waistline. ๐ WE really enjoyed this recipe
Erika
This looks so delicious! Can’t wait to give this dish a go. Yummy
Alexandra
Poached fish is such a wonderful way to serve it. I enjoyed this recipe very much – thank you!
Sue
Delicious! Can never go wrong with a good seafood dish!
Heidi Green
This is a delicious recipe, I can’t thank you enough!
I would ask you about the lemon juice and lemon zest. They are in your ingredients list, but not mentioned in the instructions. Now, coming back to the post after printing and making the recipe last night, I see you sprinkled lemon zest on the dish. What did you do with the lemon juice?
It would be helpful if you would add instructions on what to do with those, as the printout didn’t have the picture of how you used the zest, and I’m still curious about the juice. In my estimation, neither was needed (maybe because I used a Reisling), but you likely have some delicious use for them.
Thanks again!
Chef Dennis Littley
hi Heidi
the lemon juice should have gone in during the reduction and part of the zest at the final preparation when adding the spinach and tomato. Sorry about missing that in the instructions. I have added both in. It’s one of my older recipes when I was not quite as thorough. thanks for te heads up.
Heidi Green
Thanks, that’s helpful.
Maybe #12 could have at the end “, sprinkle the lemon zest over everything.”
Also, and this is just nit-picking that I didn’t even notice before, #9’s second sentence says “If you’d like to test teh fish…” – the word “the” is misspelled there. I make typos ALL the time.
Anyway, I can’t wait to try this again, this time with the zest and the juice. Hard to improve perfection, but I’m excited to check it out!
SJ
My first time poaching fish… My husband gave it a 9.5 out of 10 Thank you!!
Chef Dennis Littley
I’m happy to hear you enjoyed my recipe! I hope you find more to try
Sophia
Informative & valuable article. Really great thinking. Love all the things shared here. Keep it up.
Johanne
Had a piece of salmon and a piece of mahi-mahi left in my freezer. Recipe appealed to me for freshness, simplicity, and use of various veggies. Shrimps were a great addition. I did not let the broth consume too much to have more juice to serve with rice. So delicious! A keeper!.
Nikki Wayne
Here in our area, we have a fish called Maya-maya, not sure if it’s the same species.
Thomas
Hi Chef, thanks for the awesome recipe! We have included it in our roundup of the top 50 Mahi-Mahi recipes in the world!
Terri
I made this and it was great! Thank you! I wasn’t sure when to add the lemon juice… I didn’t see it mentioned in the actual recipe. But I threw it in there at some point and it turned out fine. Just thought you might want to add it in for us novices. So I know if it matters when or not. Thanks again. ๐
Chef Dennis Littley
I’m happy to hear you enjoyed the recipe and thank you for the heads up, I added the lemon juice in with the stock and wine addition!
Kushigalu
I made this. First time poaching fish and my whole family just loved it. Thanks for all the tips shared.
Kim Bultman | a little lunch
Dennis, I had to put off my birthday dinner by a day (the joys of moving, lol!) and had planned to do an Asian marinated salmon, but the sublime simplicity of your poached fish is making me lean towards that. Sometimes simpler is better… and more flavorful! Thank you.
Diana @DandelionGreensBlog
I was just wondering about poaching salmon. So glad I found your post today!
Chef Dennis Littley
This would work wonderfully with salmon Diana
minnie@thelady8home
Beautiful looking Mahi Mahi Chef. Interestingly, this is exactly how we cook ‘jhol’ is Bengal, India. Fish being our staple diet, poaching them is the way to go, though the flavors and spices used are very different. This looks delicious.