thatleetboy Posted September 27, 2010 Report Posted September 27, 2010 I posted here a while ago about looking for books to help me learn to clean fish. I've been reading some great books from the library, Including this one.... Cleaning and Preparing Gamefish: Step-by-Step Instructions, from Water to Table by Monte Burch http://openlibrary.org/works/OL3474855W/Cleaning_and_Preparing_Gamefish I had to work this weekend, no fishing for me. I'm hoping to take a morning off mid-week, and find a spot to fish from shore somewhere. Anyhow, I thought I should practice what I've been reading, and local Scarberia supermarket Fu Yao had fresh Red Snapper for $2.48/lb so we grabbed several and I went to town with my fillet knife in the backyard... I think I did a pretty good job, starting to have some experience, my comfort level with the knife is getting there... and this is the recipe (from the book above) we tried, quite delicious! Wine Poached Fillets 1lb fish fillets, mild and white-meated fish Italian Dressing Dash Tabasco sauce 1 cup white wine 1/4 cup water lemon pepper garlic salt Cornstarch Add Tabasco to the Italian dressing to taste and brush on the fish fillets. Allow to marinate for at least 30 minutes. Sprinkle the fillets with garlic salt and lemon pepper. Place the fillets in a large skillet, pour the wine and water around the fillets and poach for approx 5-15 minutes depending on the thickness of the fillets or until fish flakes easily. Carefully remove the fillets to a warm platter. "Reduce" the liquid in the skillet, then stir a little cornstarch into the skillet, and cook until thickened. Spread this sauce over the skillets and serve immediately. We used a Riesling for the white wine. All I can say is, it was yummy!
HTHM Posted September 27, 2010 Report Posted September 27, 2010 You are making me hungry. Well done, now do that with your own catch, head over to the islands and you may get some out of the waters there.
thatleetboy Posted September 27, 2010 Author Report Posted September 27, 2010 You are making me hungry. Well done, now do that with your own catch, head over to the islands and you may get some out of the waters there. I sent you a message asking if there's any advice on where to fish on the Island... I haven't a clue where to start! Any advice is more than welcome, I'm pretty new at this! Cheers
Kwan Posted September 27, 2010 Report Posted September 27, 2010 thats some cheap red snapper... green bass go for $9.99 at lucky food mart lol. makes me want to go fishing every time I see those fish tanks... its like, hey its a largie
Governator Posted September 27, 2010 Report Posted September 27, 2010 (edited) bring back a bucket of perch and after 1 session you'll be a pro adopting your own technique. It's really about comfort with the knife and letting it do what it's suppose to do. Keep it sharp for good results. Edited September 27, 2010 by Governator
TC1OZ Posted September 27, 2010 Report Posted September 27, 2010 I filleted a couple bass for the first time this summer. Like anything, you'll get better with time.... or give up!
gaspumper Posted September 28, 2010 Report Posted September 28, 2010 First thing you should do is have your wife hide the fillet knife,then go out and buy an electric fillet knife,does a lot nicer job at cleaning your catch and twice as fast as a reg knife,once you get use to handling it.
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