Pan-seared cod is the kind of dish you order at a restaurant thinking you can’t pull it off at home. That’s a misconception. Twenty-five minutes, one pan, and you get fish with a crackling crust topped with a lemon butter sauce that shines like satin.

Ingredients :
- Cod — Choose fillets of uniform thickness—that guarantees even cooking. Frozen is perfect: thaw in the fridge the day before and pat dry thoroughly with paper towels. A damp fillet won’t brown, it steams.
- Butter — Good unsalted butter, not margarine. The sauce stands or falls on the quality of the butter. A knob for cooking, two cold knobs for the sauce—that’s the difference between a silky emulsion and a greasy puddle.
- Lemon — A fresh lemon, not bottled. The zest of half a lemon in the sauce really changes something—a slight bitterness that balances the butter’s richness without making everything acidic.
- Garlic — A crushed clove rather than minced. It should perfume the sauce without dominating. If it browns in the pan, start over—burnt garlic leaves a bitter aftertaste that won’t go away.


