Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt arrived on my table on an early spring afternoon when a friend handed me a crate of fresh sea urchins from the harbor, still smelling faintly of salt and kelp. I remember standing at my counter, the shells like little dark moons, and deciding I wanted to honor them gently, not mask their delicate ocean sweetness. That day I set out to pair the briny roe with a bright, acidulated hollandaise and a cooling spoonful of yogurt, creating contrasts that felt both elegant and honest.

What followed was a relaxed, almost meditative prep session. I cleaned the herbs slowly, slowed my breathing as I removed the roe, and thought about textures, how a soft, creamy sauce could cradle the fragile roe without overpowering it. The combination of the buttery hollandaise, the faint apple and fennel crunch, and the fresh herb aromatics felt like a small celebration. Guests gathered around the counter, noses close as I plated them, and we all leaned in to taste that first forkful together.

Now I make Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt whenever I find great urchins, and the ritual of assembling each shell is part of the pleasure. It is not a rushed dish, and it rewards care at each step. Whether you are serving a few friends or preparing a special starter, this recipe keeps the urchin as the star while adding complementary elements that lift it. I hope you enjoy the layered flavors as much as I do, and that this recipe sends you the same sense of calm and connection that it did for me that first spring afternoon.

Recipe Snapshot

Total Time:
30 mins
Prep Time:
25 mins
Cook Time:
5 mins
Difficulty:
Medium
Calories:
300 kcal
Cuisine:
Mediterranean
Diet:
Gluten-Free, Low FODMAP
Course:
Dinner
Tools Used:
Scissors, Spoon, Fine sieve, Bain marie, Oven grill

Why This Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt Hits Different

1. Pure brine forward flavor that still feels refined

I love how Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt allows the sea urchin to remain the protagonist. The roe is handled gently, and by using its own water and a light acid in the hollandaise, the ocean notes stay prominent while a buttery lift adds depth. I find that approach lets the urchin sing, rather than being obscured by heavy seasoning.

2. Balanced textures from creamy to crisp

There is a satisfying play between the hollandaise and the spoon of Greek yogurt, with thin julienned celery, fennel, and apple adding a bright snap. I often tell guests to notice how the crunch cuts through the cream, refreshing the palate. That contrast is what makes each bite interesting from start to finish.

3. Aromatics that elevate without stealing the show

The use of fresh chervil, chive points, and sorrel leaves gives the dish an herbal lift. I like sprinkling them right before serving so they stay vivid, and their green perfume complements both the roe and the acidulated sauce. It is subtle, but it matters a lot.

4. Elegant presentation with simple technique

Keeping the shells for presentation feels theatrical but really it is practical too. Serving the roe in its shell keeps it cool and contained. The two minute temper under the grill just warms the sauce and slightly tames the rawness of the roe, which I think most people appreciate. In short, a small flourish yields a big impression.

5. Flexible for intimate meals or special occasions

I find this recipe perfect for a quiet dinner or a refined starter for a small gathering. Because the ingredients are few and the method is deliberate, you can scale the plating rhythm to the room. Guests always notice the flavor layers and the thought behind the pairing.

Essential Ingredients for Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

These ingredients form a small, purposeful cast. The key players are the sea urchins, which provide briny, creamy roe, and the butter driven hollandaise that adds silk and richness. The Greek yogurt and a splash of sea urchin water bring cooling acidity, while the herbs and crisp produce introduce brightness and texture. Together they create a balanced dish where each component supports the urchin.

  • 12 sea urchins: Contain delicate uni roe that provides a briny, creamy core flavor and elegant oceanic richness to the dish, intended to be spooned into shells or gently folded into the sauce; handle with care to preserve texture and freshness and serve chilled or briefly warmed to avoid graininess.
  • 2 egg yolks: Emulsify and enrich the hollandaise base by providing structure and silkiness, whisked over gentle heat to create a stable, glossy sauce while imparting a subtle custardy depth; temper carefully and monitor temperature to prevent scrambling.
  • 2 tablespoons Modena vinegar: Acidulate and add a rounded tang to the sauce, balancing the richness of egg yolks and butter while contributing a slightly sweet, mellow vinegar character; combine with water to moderate acidity and brighten overall flavors.
  • 2 tablespoons water: Dilute and temper the vinegar to control acidity and help regulate sauce temperature during emulsification, providing a neutral carrier that aids in achieving a smooth consistency without diluting flavor excessively.
  • 100 grams butter: Clarify and supply the primary fat for the hollandaise, melting into a silky emulsion that gives the sauce its luscious mouthfeel and glossy finish while contributing subtle nutty and caramelized notes when gently browned during clarification.
  • 50 grams Greek yogurt: Provide a cool, tangy base layer beneath the uni and sauce, offering creamy acidity and a refreshing contrast to the rich hollandaise; spooned as a cushion, it lightens the overall palate and adds slight probiotic creaminess.
  • 1 bunch fresh chervil: Freshly herbaceous and aromatic, supply bright anise-like and parsley notes that lift the dish; finely chopped chervil should be folded in or used as a delicate garnish to accentuate freshness and counterbalance richness.
  • chive points: Offer slender mild oniony garlicky notes and a crisp textural accent, suitable as a ribboned garnish to provide bursts of delicate vegetal flavor and elegant vertical presentation without overpowering the sea urchin.
  • 1/2 bulb small fennel: Contribute a subtle aniseed sweetness and gentle crunch when thinly sliced, adding aromatic complexity and a cooling, slightly licorice undertone that contrasts with the sauce’s richness and the uni’s brine.
  • 1 stalk celery and leaves: Add aromatic bitterness and leafy vegetal crunch through both stalk and leaves, delivering celery’s green backbone and fresh herbal hints that brighten each bite and provide textural contrast against the creamy components.
  • 1/4 granny smith apple: Introduce crisp acidity and firm fruit texture through tart apple slices or brunoise, cutting through the hollandaise’s richness and complementing the sea urchin’s saline sweetness with a clean, fruity snap.
  • sorrel leaves: Bring bright, sorrel’s lemony sharpness and tender leaf texture to the plate, contributing a vibrant acidic lift and delicate green notes that enhance seafood flavors and balance the buttery sauce.
  • 20 milliliters sea urchin water: Supply concentrated umami-tinged brine captured from the sea urchin’s own liquor, intensifying marine depth and seasoning while reinforcing the roe’s oceanic character; use sparingly to avoid overpowering delicate flavors.
  • 2 tablespoons arbequina olive oil: Finish with a fruity, peppery olive oil that rounds and enriches the dish, drizzled lightly to add glossy sheen, aromatic complexity, and a subtle Mediterranean fruitiness that complements both yogurt and hollandaise.

How to Cook Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

Working through these steps is a slow, tactile practice that rewards patience. The sequence moves from careful cleaning to precise emulsification, then to composed plating. Maintain gentle hands, watch textures, and taste as you go so the balance remains true to the sea urchin‘s delicate nature.

  1. Open the sea urchins with a scissors with a round cut at the top or mouth end (use gloves to protect your hands).: The initial sound is a soft snap as the scissors cut through the outer shell, and you might notice a faint ocean scent rise as the lid comes away. Performing a round cut preserves the shell shape for plating, and gloves protect you from the sharp spines and any slippery juices. Keep the urchins on ice while working, and work over a tray to catch liquid. A common error is forcing the scissors too quickly, which can shatter the shell; take a measured approach, turning the urchin as you cut to maintain control.
  2. Then remove the roe with a spoon very carefully so they don't break.: As you scoop, the roe will appear as soft, custardy lobes, often bright to deep orange, depending on the harvest. Use a gentle scooping motion, supporting the underside of each lobe, because they tear easily. Place each piece on a chilled plate to maintain texture. If pieces tear, arrange smaller bits together to preserve appearance. Avoid aggressive scraping which bruises the roe and releases excess liquid.
  3. Save the water of the urchins to clean the roe later. If we clean them with their own water, they won't lose flavor.: That water carries concentrated ocean flavor, so collect it as you open each urchin. When you rinse or gently clean the roe with this liquid, you retain nuance that would otherwise be lost with plain water. Strain the liquid through a fine sieve to remove debris. Do not over rinse the roe, as excess handling will water it down and dull the flavor.
  4. Save the shells for the final presentation.: Cleaned shells are small vessels that keep the roe together and create a dramatic serving. Rinse them, remove any loose spines, and let them dry briefly; a little moisture is fine, it helps the yogurt bed adhere. Arrange shells on a tray while you prepare the rest of the components so plating is fluid. A mistake is serving them with sharp shell fragments inside, so inspect closely before filling.
  5. Carefully clean all the aromatic herbs.: Rinse the chervil , chive points , and sorrel leaves in cold water and spin or blot gently to remove moisture. The herbs' aroma is fragile, so avoid bruising them during handling. Chop only what you need to keep freshness. Overchopping will release too much juice and can make the herbs limp on the plate.
  6. Peel the stalks of celery and cut into a fine julienne.: Removing the fibrous outer threads gives a tender crunch that complements the roe. A thin julienne ensures they mingle well with the apple and fennel, distributing texture evenly. Keep the cuts uniform for consistent mouthfeel. If the strands are left thick, they can become fibrous and unpleasant to bite through.
  7. Do the same with the apple and the fennel.: Cut the Granny Smith apple and the fennel into fine matchsticks so they provide crispness without overwhelming. Their perfume is bright and slightly sweet, and when cut thin they integrate seamlessly. Toss them briefly with a whisper of the sea urchin water if you like, which preserves the ocean connection. Avoid large chunks that will dominate the delicate roe.
  8. Mix the yogurt with the sea urchins water, a spoon of arbequina olive oil and salt flakes.: Upon whisking, the Greek yogurt loosens and gains a faint saline ocean note that binds the plate. The olive oil adds silk and gloss, while salt flakes awaken the flavors. Taste for balance; the yogurt should be bright but not sour, and the sea urchin water should be perceptible but not briny. Over seasoning here can mute the roe, so add small increments and taste carefully.
  9. Prepare in the traditional way.: This instruction calls for making a classic emulsified hollandaise with the egg yolks , Modena vinegar , and melted butter . Use a gentle bain marie and whisk steadily until the sauce becomes glossy and slightly thickened. The aroma will shift from vinegary to buttery as it emulsifies, and that change is the cue that the sauce is set. If the sauce becomes grainy, a touch of warm water and vigorous whisking can often bring it back; if it splits, start with a fresh yolk in a clean bowl and slowly add the broken sauce.
  10. You can place the sea urchins in a long platter preferably three urchins per plate.: A long platter provides rhythm on the table, and grouping three per plate creates a composed portion. The visual of the shells resting on a bed of yogurt is inviting, and the contrast of orange roe against white yogurt is striking. Arrange them with intention for balance. Avoid crowding them too close, which can make plating fussy and difficult to eat.
  11. Fill every washed sea urchin shell with about 4 roes, carefully placing and covering them with two spoons of hollandaise sauce lengthwise.: The texture when spooning is key; you want the roe to sit nestled beneath the glossy hollandaise , not submerged. The warm sauce will slightly temper the roe, creating a silky mouthfeel. Two spoons lengthwise add an elegant stripe of butteriness. Overfilling or pouring hot sauce can overwhelm the roe, so pour gently and monitor temperature.
  12. Give them two minutes under the oven grill in order for them to temper.: The brief heat will warm the sauce and set it gently without cooking the roe through, creating a subtle contrast between warm sauce and cool interior. Expect a faint rising of aroma as butter heats, but avoid longer exposure which will firm the roe. Keep the rack centered and watch closely to prevent browning.
  13. Now add a soup spoon of yogurt and place the mixed aromatic herbs on top.: The spoonful of yogurt provides a cool cushion and a tangy counterpoint right after the tempering. Scatter the herbs for an aromatic finish and visual brightness. Their perfume should come forward immediately, so add them at the last moment. Adding herbs too early will cause them to wilt and lose their vibrancy.
  14. Finish the dish with drops of olive oil and a pinch of salt over the aromatics.: A final shimmer of arbequina olive oil and a few flakes of salt lift the flavors and lend shine. The oil's fruitiness complements the butter, and the flakes add a pleasant crunch. Taste a sample bite before serving to check balance. Over salting at this stage cannot be undone, so be cautious.

Tips for Success

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

These tips will help you execute the plating and flavor balance with confidence. Each one focuses on preserving the urchin‘s delicate texture and amplifying subtle aromatics without overwhelming the dish.

  • Chill your ingredients: Keep the sea urchins and the Greek yogurt refrigerated until assembly to protect texture and freshness.
  • Control the heat: When making hollandaise, use a gentle bain marie and moderate heat to avoid curdling the egg yolks.
  • Reserve urchin water: Save and strain the liquid from the shells to mix into the yogurt, preserving ocean flavor across the dish.
  • Keep cuts fine: Julienne the celery, fennel, and apple thinly so they add texture without dominating the bite.
  • Add herbs last: Place the chervil, chive points, and sorrel leaves just before serving to keep their aroma bright.
  • Use mild finishing oil: Choose a gentle arbequina olive oil to finish, avoiding robust oils that would mask the roe.

Great Combinations for Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

This dish shines as a refined starter or a small plate in a tasting menu. Consider light accompaniments that echo the sea and provide contrast, such as crisp breads and bright salads, and think about occasions that call for focused flavors.

  • Light crisp breads: Serve thinly sliced, toasted breads on the side so guests can scoop or support a bite without overpowering the roe.
  • Simple green salad: A salad of tender leaves dressed with a light vinaigrette offers a refreshing counterpoint and palate cleanser between bites.
  • Seasonal spring gatherings: This is ideal for springtime lunches or special dinners when fresh herbs and fennel are at their best.
  • Small formal occasions: Use as a starter in a multi course menu to create an elegant opening that sets a refined tone.
  • Storage guidance: Keep any unused roe chilled tightly wrapped and use within a day to maintain texture and safety.
  • Serving temperature: Aim to serve with the roe cool and the sauce gently warm to create a pleasing contrast of temperatures.

FAQ

Fresh sea urchins should smell like the sea, clean and briny, not fishy or sour. The shells should feel heavy for their size and the spines should move slightly when handled. When you open them, the roe should be firmish and brightly colored, ranging from pale orange to deep orange depending on the harvest. If the roe looks mushy, has an off odor, or any slimy film, do not use it. Always keep urchins chilled from purchase to plating, and use them within a day for best texture and safety.

Making hollandaise ahead is possible, but timing matters because freshly emulsified sauce has the best texture and shine. If you must prepare it earlier, keep it warm in a sealed container inside a low temperature water bath and whisk gently before serving to revive the emulsion. Avoid reheating directly over high heat which can make the sauce break. If your sauce starts to separate, you can often rescue it by whisking a little into a fresh yolk in a clean bowl, then slowly adding the broken sauce back in.

If you do not have enough sea urchin water, use a small amount of cold seawater substitute made from a light brine, though using actual urchin water is preferable for authenticity. Another option is to reserve a very small splash of the urchin liquid when opening and strain it to remove grit. Be conservative, because the goal is to enhance ocean notes without overdosing the yogurt with salt. Taste as you go and adjust with tiny increments.

Leftover prepared roe should be kept tightly covered and refrigerated and used within 24 hours for best flavor and food safety. The hollandaise will thicken when chilled and may separate, so it is better stored separately and gently rewhisked or partially remade when ready to serve. The yogurt mixture can be held for a day as well, but herbs and cut apple will lose crispness, so consider storing those components separately and finishing the assembly shortly before serving.

Conclusion

This dish stands out because it keeps the delicate sea urchin at the center while layering complementary textures and bright aromatics. The contrast of warm, buttery hollandaise, cool tangy yogurt, and crunchy fennel and apple creates a memorable mouthfeel that elevates the roe without masking it. I encourage you to try this recipe when you can find fresh urchins, take your time with the cleaning and emulsifying, and savor the slow, careful assembly. It makes for a refined starter that tells a small story about the sea with every bite.

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt

Sea Urchins in Acidulated and Aromatic Hollandaise Sauce over Yogurt combines creamy, briny roe with a silky hollandaise and tangy yogurt for an elegant starter. The bright crunch of fennel and apple and a scatter of fresh herbs keep the dish lively, making it a perfect easy weeknight special or refined gathering starter. Try it for a memorable seafood moment that highlights pure ocean flavor.
Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Course Dinner
Cuisine Mediterranean
Servings 4 servings
Calories 300 kcal

Equipment

  • Scissors
  • Spoon
  • Fine sieve
  • Bain marie
  • Oven grill

Ingredients
  

  • 12 sea urchins Contain delicate uni roe that provides a briny, creamy core flavor and elegant oceanic richness to the dish, intended to be spooned into shells or gently folded into the sauce; handle with care to preserve texture and freshness and serve chilled or briefly warmed to avoid graininess.
  • 2 egg yolks Emulsify and enrich the hollandaise base by providing structure and silkiness, whisked over gentle heat to create a stable, glossy sauce while imparting a subtle custardy depth; temper carefully and monitor temperature to prevent scrambling.
  • 2 tablespoons Modena vinegar Acidulate and add a rounded tang to the sauce, balancing the richness of egg yolks and butter while contributing a slightly sweet, mellow vinegar character; combine with water to moderate acidity and brighten overall flavors.
  • 2 tablespoons water Dilute and temper the vinegar to control acidity and help regulate sauce temperature during emulsification, providing a neutral carrier that aids in achieving a smooth consistency without diluting flavor excessively.
  • 100 grams butter Clarify and supply the primary fat for the hollandaise, melting into a silky emulsion that gives the sauce its luscious mouthfeel and glossy finish while contributing subtle nutty and caramelized notes when gently browned during clarification.
  • 50 grams Greek yogurt Provide a cool, tangy base layer beneath the uni and sauce, offering creamy acidity and a refreshing contrast to the rich hollandaise; spooned as a cushion, it lightens the overall palate and adds slight probiotic creaminess.
  • 1 bunch fresh chervil Freshly herbaceous and aromatic, supply bright anise-like and parsley notes that lift the dish; finely chopped chervil should be folded in or used as a delicate garnish to accentuate freshness and counterbalance richness.
  • chive points Offer slender mild oniony garlicky notes and a crisp textural accent, suitable as a ribboned garnish to provide bursts of delicate vegetal flavor and elegant vertical presentation without overpowering the sea urchin.
  • 1/2 bulb small fennel Contribute a subtle aniseed sweetness and gentle crunch when thinly sliced, adding aromatic complexity and a cooling, slightly licorice undertone that contrasts with the sauce’s richness and the uni’s brine.
  • 1 stalk celery and leaves Add aromatic bitterness and leafy vegetal crunch through both stalk and leaves, delivering celery’s green backbone and fresh herbal hints that brighten each bite and provide textural contrast against the creamy components.
  • 1/4 granny smith apple Introduce crisp acidity and firm fruit texture through tart apple slices or brunoise, cutting through the hollandaise’s richness and complementing the sea urchin’s saline sweetness with a clean, fruity snap.
  • sorrel leaves Bring bright, sorrel’s lemony sharpness and tender leaf texture to the plate, contributing a vibrant acidic lift and delicate green notes that enhance seafood flavors and balance the buttery sauce.
  • 20 milliliters sea urchin water Supply concentrated umami-tinged brine captured from the sea urchin’s own liquor, intensifying marine depth and seasoning while reinforcing the roe’s oceanic character; use sparingly to avoid overpowering delicate flavors.
  • 2 tablespoons arbequina olive oil Finish with a fruity, peppery olive oil that rounds and enriches the dish, drizzled lightly to add glossy sheen, aromatic complexity, and a subtle Mediterranean fruitiness that complements both yogurt and hollandaise.

Instructions
 

  • Open the sea urchins with a scissors with a round cut at the top or mouth end (use gloves to protect your hands).: The initial sound is a soft snap as the scissors cut through the outer shell, and you might notice a faint ocean scent rise as the lid comes away. Performing a round cut preserves the shell shape for plating, and gloves protect you from the sharp spines and any slippery juices. Keep the urchins on ice while working, and work over a tray to catch liquid. A common error is forcing the scissors too quickly, which can shatter the shell; take a measured approach, turning the urchin as you cut to maintain control.
  • Then remove the roe with a spoon very carefully so they don't break.: As you scoop, the roe will appear as soft, custardy lobes, often bright to deep orange, depending on the harvest. Use a gentle scooping motion, supporting the underside of each lobe, because they tear easily. Place each piece on a chilled plate to maintain texture. If pieces tear, arrange smaller bits together to preserve appearance. Avoid aggressive scraping which bruises the roe and releases excess liquid.
  • Save the water of the urchins to clean the roe later. If we clean them with their own water, they won't lose flavor.: That water carries concentrated ocean flavor, so collect it as you open each urchin. When you rinse or gently clean the roe with this liquid, you retain nuance that would otherwise be lost with plain water. Strain the liquid through a fine sieve to remove debris. Do not over rinse the roe, as excess handling will water it down and dull the flavor.
  • Save the shells for the final presentation.: Cleaned shells are small vessels that keep the roe together and create a dramatic serving. Rinse them, remove any loose spines, and let them dry briefly; a little moisture is fine, it helps the yogurt bed adhere. Arrange shells on a tray while you prepare the rest of the components so plating is fluid. A mistake is serving them with sharp shell fragments inside, so inspect closely before filling.
  • Carefully clean all the aromatic herbs.: Rinse the chervil , chive points , and sorrel leaves in cold water and spin or blot gently to remove moisture. The herbs' aroma is fragile, so avoid bruising them during handling. Chop only what you need to keep freshness. Overchopping will release too much juice and can make the herbs limp on the plate.
  • Peel the stalks of celery and cut into a fine julienne.: Removing the fibrous outer threads gives a tender crunch that complements the roe. A thin julienne ensures they mingle well with the apple and fennel, distributing texture evenly. Keep the cuts uniform for consistent mouthfeel. If the strands are left thick, they can become fibrous and unpleasant to bite through.
  • Do the same with the apple and the fennel.: Cut the Granny Smith apple and the fennel into fine matchsticks so they provide crispness without overwhelming. Their perfume is bright and slightly sweet, and when cut thin they integrate seamlessly. Toss them briefly with a whisper of the sea urchin water if you like, which preserves the ocean connection. Avoid large chunks that will dominate the delicate roe.
  • Mix the yogurt with the sea urchins water, a spoon of arbequina olive oil and salt flakes.: Upon whisking, the Greek yogurt loosens and gains a faint saline ocean note that binds the plate. The olive oil adds silk and gloss, while salt flakes awaken the flavors. Taste for balance; the yogurt should be bright but not sour, and the sea urchin water should be perceptible but not briny. Over seasoning here can mute the roe, so add small increments and taste carefully.
  • Prepare in the traditional way.: This instruction calls for making a classic emulsified hollandaise with the egg yolks , Modena vinegar , and melted butter . Use a gentle bain marie and whisk steadily until the sauce becomes glossy and slightly thickened. The aroma will shift from vinegary to buttery as it emulsifies, and that change is the cue that the sauce is set. If the sauce becomes grainy, a touch of warm water and vigorous whisking can often bring it back; if it splits, start with a fresh yolk in a clean bowl and slowly add the broken sauce.
  • You can place the sea urchins in a long platter preferably three urchins per plate.: A long platter provides rhythm on the table, and grouping three per plate creates a composed portion. The visual of the shells resting on a bed of yogurt is inviting, and the contrast of orange roe against white yogurt is striking. Arrange them with intention for balance. Avoid crowding them too close, which can make plating fussy and difficult to eat.
  • Fill every washed sea urchin shell with about 4 roes, carefully placing and covering them with two spoons of hollandaise sauce lengthwise.: The texture when spooning is key; you want the roe to sit nestled beneath the glossy hollandaise , not submerged. The warm sauce will slightly temper the roe, creating a silky mouthfeel. Two spoons lengthwise add an elegant stripe of butteriness. Overfilling or pouring hot sauce can overwhelm the roe, so pour gently and monitor temperature.
  • Give them two minutes under the oven grill in order for them to temper.: The brief heat will warm the sauce and set it gently without cooking the roe through, creating a subtle contrast between warm sauce and cool interior. Expect a faint rising of aroma as butter heats, but avoid longer exposure which will firm the roe. Keep the rack centered and watch closely to prevent browning.
  • Now add a soup spoon of yogurt and place the mixed aromatic herbs on top.: The spoonful of yogurt provides a cool cushion and a tangy counterpoint right after the tempering. Scatter the herbs for an aromatic finish and visual brightness. Their perfume should come forward immediately, so add them at the last moment. Adding herbs too early will cause them to wilt and lose their vibrancy.
  • Finish the dish with drops of olive oil and a pinch of salt over the aromatics.: A final shimmer of arbequina olive oil and a few flakes of salt lift the flavors and lend shine. The oil's fruitiness complements the butter, and the flakes add a pleasant crunch. Taste a sample bite before serving to check balance. Over salting at this stage cannot be undone, so be cautious.

Notes

  • Chill your ingredients: Keep the sea urchins and the Greek yogurt refrigerated until assembly to protect texture and freshness.
  • Control the heat: When making hollandaise, use a gentle bain marie and moderate heat to avoid curdling the egg yolks.
  • Reserve urchin water: Save and strain the liquid from the shells to mix into the yogurt, preserving ocean flavor across the dish.
  • Keep cuts fine: Julienne the celery, fennel, and apple thinly so they add texture without dominating the bite.
  • Add herbs last: Place the chervil, chive points, and sorrel leaves just before serving to keep their aroma bright.
  • Use mild finishing oil: Choose a gentle arbequina olive oil to finish, avoiding robust oils that would mask the roe.
Keyword acidulated hollandaise sea urchin, sea urchin hollandaise, shellfish appetizer spring, urchin recipe yogurt

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