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Flounder Gigging
Vic Smith wrote:
Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. |
Flounder Gigging
Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it.
Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic |
Flounder Gigging
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 07:18:47 -0500, Vic Smith wrote:
Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic Check your game regs first. Around here, NJ, gigging is illegal. We can bow hunt for certain species, but gigging is a no-no. And, flounder is very good, especially if you don't like the taste of fish. It's flavor is quite mild. |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 26, 8:18*am, Vic Smith wrote:
Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic Used to gig flounder in Florida. And yes, they are VERY good! |
Flounder Gigging
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote:
Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic |
Flounder Gigging
Vic Smith wrote:
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. When I was a kid, I use to go fishing about three times a week in the summer in Long Island Sound with the landlord of the cottage we rented, and later bought. He was a retired printer. We'd fish for flounder and porgies. He was a remarkable fisherman, and we always came home with tons of fish. He'd clean them all, and give at least a pound of filets to about everyone in the little neighborhood. Anyway, he and his wife preferred baked fish, and if I was around, she'd invite me in for lunch or dinner. Sometimes she'd stuff the flounder with a little crabmeat from crabs I'd catch with bits of chicken neck. She was a great cook, as were many of the women of her generation. Life certainly was simpler - and a lot safer - in the good old days. |
Flounder Gigging
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 10:38:00 -0400, HK wrote:
I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. I'd substitute the hot sauce with black pepper. Otherwise sounds like a plan. When I was a kid, I use to go fishing about three times a week in the summer in Long Island Sound with the landlord of the cottage we rented, and later bought. He was a retired printer. We'd fish for flounder and porgies. He was a remarkable fisherman, and we always came home with tons of fish. He'd clean them all, and give at least a pound of filets to about everyone in the little neighborhood. Anyway, he and his wife preferred baked fish, and if I was around, she'd invite me in for lunch or dinner. Sometimes she'd stuff the flounder with a little crabmeat from crabs I'd catch with bits of chicken neck. She was a great cook, as were many of the women of her generation. I'm guessing there were plenty of bad cooks too, but luckily not in my family. My wife is an excellent cook - professional. Burp. Life certainly was simpler - and a lot safer - in the good old days. It's being a kid that's simple. An empty brain can be a blessing. That flounder stuffed with crabmeat sounds like an acceptable tricking out. (-: --Vic |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 26, 10:38*am, HK wrote:
Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... |
Flounder Gigging
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Flounder Gigging
On Apr 26, 2:06*pm, HK wrote:
wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 09:56:39 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: That flounder stuffed with crabmeat sounds like an acceptable tricking out. (-: That is my impression of flounder too. It certainly needs something else to give it some flavor. (hence all the dough in the fried fish) BTW don't try to throw it on the grille. It will just fall apart. Now Black Grouper * ... That's fish. *;-) I love the light taste of flounder. A few italian bread crumbs as a light coating, and it is delicious. Pssst, dummy! If you use an egg wash, then bread crumbs, it's FAR from a "light coating". |
Flounder Gigging
wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 09:56:39 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: That flounder stuffed with crabmeat sounds like an acceptable tricking out. (-: That is my impression of flounder too. It certainly needs something else to give it some flavor. (hence all the dough in the fried fish) BTW don't try to throw it on the grille. It will just fall apart. Now Black Grouper ... That's fish. ;-) In foil with onion & pepper slices and real butter on the grill. Good stuff! |
Flounder Gigging
"Vic Smith" wrote in message ... Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic Gone flounder gigging many times. The secret is to find a place where you can wade in knee deep water, and see them. Places like that are easy to find if you talk to locals and bait shops. It may take a few trips to get your own places, as they don't always share the best ones. Flounder gigging is a hoot. Carry a pillow case with you, too. If you flounder on a beach, the little swale between the first and second breaker is refuge to crabs that are shucking their shells, and you can pick up soft shelled crabs. Carry some grass (lawn type) in your bag to keep them moist. Shuffle your feet, and don't take big steps, or you may step on a ray. Bummer, and an ER trip for sure. Flounder, IMHO, is best when butterflied, joined together at the tail. Then a filling of crabmeat and shrimp is made and put on the bottom half. Top half folded over, then broiled. Or, you can cut out a pocket in the side of the fish, and stuff it with the crab/shrimp mix. Flounder is a member of the sole family, and has soft tender flesh. Not sure how deep frying it would be, but I would fillet it first. Steve |
Flounder Gigging
wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 14:06:29 -0400, HK wrote: That flounder stuffed with crabmeat sounds like an acceptable tricking out. (-: That is my impression of flounder too. It certainly needs something else to give it some flavor. (hence all the dough in the fried fish) BTW don't try to throw it on the grille. It will just fall apart. Now Black Grouper ... That's fish. ;-) I love the light taste of flounder. A few italian bread crumbs as a light coating, and it is delicious. There is no "wrong" when it comes to what you like. Olive oil/ lemon marinated Black mullet with a light dusting of "Emerils" and "bammed" in a hot skillet isn't bad either. Some people swoon, some people gag ......... sushi ............. seared ahi ............... calamari ......... whatever. There is no consistency when it comes to taste in seafood. Steve |
Flounder Gigging
"Vic Smith" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic Never did the gigging but used to see the giggers when I was stationed in Biloxi. Flounder is one of the better fish to eat. Here in the San Francisco area, we seem to be having the Starry Flounder coming back. 40 years ago, you could fill a 5 gallon bucket in an afternoon of fishing. Now get quite a few when bait fishing for sturgeon and striped bass. A little oil in the pan and a little butter for more flavor. A very light dusting with Italian bread crumbs, no egg wash, just sprinkle some on and lightly fry and flip over and fry the other side. Until flakey. Same way I do Sand Dabs, but I fillet the flounder and just scrub the skin of the 'dabs and pull the skin off after cooking. Sand Dabs are like 6 oz flounder. |
Flounder Gigging
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 07:18:47 -0500, Vic Smith wrote:
Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv Floundering is very popular down here on the Gulf Coast (Gulfport/Biloxi). Driving down the beach at night you'll see dozens of lights in the shallows. I've been at it since I was a kid. We don't use 3 prong gigs with barbs though. I've never even seen that before. Just a single prong, like a spike. Makes a hole about the size of a ..22 caliber. You stick him and hold him against the bottom so he won't get off, then reach underneath to hold him on the gig, then lift him out of the water and flip the gig upside down at the same time. String him up and repeat all night long :-) And we don't normally use a boat either. It would be too unhandy having to drag a boat across all the sandbars. We wade. It's an interesting video though. But I think I'll be sticking to the ol' tried and true method. Rick |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 26, 10:38*am, HK wrote:
Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. When I was a kid, I use to go fishing about three times a week in the summer in Long Island Sound with the landlord of the cottage we rented, and later bought. He was a retired printer. We'd fish for flounder and porgies. He was a remarkable fisherman, and we always came home with tons of fish. He'd clean them all, and give at least a pound of filets to about everyone in the little neighborhood. Anyway, he and his wife preferred baked fish, and if I was around, she'd invite me in for lunch or dinner. Sometimes she'd stuff the flounder with a little crabmeat from crabs I'd catch with bits of chicken neck. She was a great cook, as were many of the women of her generation. Life certainly was simpler - and a lot safer - in the good old days. Man.... now you've made me hungry for Fish..... |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 26, 12:33*pm, wrote:
On Apr 26, 10:38*am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here. |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 26, 4:19*pm, "mmc" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 09:56:39 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: That flounder stuffed with crabmeat sounds like an acceptable tricking out. (-: That is my impression of flounder too. It certainly needs something else to give it some flavor. (hence all the dough in the fried fish) BTW don't try to throw it on the grille. It will just fall apart. Now Black Grouper * ... That's fish. *;-) In foil with onion & pepper slices and real butter on the grill. Good stuff! Onion and Lemon slices are good too... but I've never tried it with Flounder. Only Pickerel, Rainbow Trout, and Salmon. |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 6:07*am, HK wrote:
wrote: On Apr 26, 12:33 pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38 am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here. It's loogy...he and his idiot brother, justhate, specialize in crapping up the newsgroup. Best thing to do with loogy is either filter him out or ignore him entirely. You won't be missing anything.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Geeze, I was off at the races with The Mouse all day and most of the week/weekend... You, Slammer, Donnie, and JPS are the only haters here, go look at your posts.. Deflection doesn't change the facts.... Get a life, you hide under your desk and post all frekin' day... |
Flounder Gigging
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote:
have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. Spear, not fork.. The triple point ones are known as tridents, from words meaning three teeth. The use them around here for taking carp. Casady |
Flounder Gigging
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 18:55:11 -0700, "CalifBill"
wrote: Never did the gigging but used to see the giggers when I was stationed in Biloxi. Flounder is one of the better fish to eat. Here in the San Francisco area, we seem to be having the Starry Flounder coming back. 40 years ago, you could fill a 5 gallon bucket in an afternoon of fishing. Now get quite a few when bait fishing for sturgeon and striped bass. A little oil in the pan and a little butter for more flavor. A very light dusting with Italian bread crumbs, no egg wash, just sprinkle some on and lightly fry and flip over and fry the other side. Until flakey. Same way I do Sand Dabs, but I fillet the flounder and just scrub the skin of the 'dabs and pull the skin off after cooking. Sand Dabs are like 6 oz flounder. That sounds right. Might have mentioned this before, but my favorite meal of all time was fried up like that. Don't know what kind of bread crumbs though. Me and uncle Russ had been on the Caloosahatchee from about 6 AM until noon, and had caught a mess of sheepshead and drum, filet size. He used metal "safety pin" type stringers and we pierced the fish through the lip. They were as lively when we got to the dock as they had been when caught. Him and aunt Clara had a place on a canal by the river in Cape Coral. Uncle Russ had them all filleted and they were Clara's frying pan within half an hour. Only thing on the kitchen table was a tub of oleo, white bread, and cold beer. Clara kept up with us, piling fillets on our plates. Russ was tight and they didn't run a/c, so I was dripping sweat on my fish. Still the best meal I ever had. Delicious. Even that white bread and oleo with a mouthful of fish. Must have been mighty hungry. Damn, wish I could relive that day. They're both gone, but they sure had their share of fish. He lived to catch and eat fish. My dad was like that too, but mixed it up with steak. --Vic |
Flounder Gigging
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 23:32:42 -0500, lid wrote:
On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 07:18:47 -0500, Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv Floundering is very popular down here on the Gulf Coast (Gulfport/Biloxi). Driving down the beach at night you'll see dozens of lights in the shallows. I've been at it since I was a kid. We don't use 3 prong gigs with barbs though. I've never even seen that before. Just a single prong, like a spike. Makes a hole about the size of a .22 caliber. You stick him and hold him against the bottom so he won't get off, then reach underneath to hold him on the gig, then lift him out of the water and flip the gig upside down at the same time. String him up and repeat all night long :-) And we don't normally use a boat either. It would be too unhandy having to drag a boat across all the sandbars. We wade. It's an interesting video though. But I think I'll be sticking to the ol' tried and true method. Man, I'm jealous. Sure wish I had been born down there. I should be fishing all the time. --Vic |
Flounder Gigging
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Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 1:11*am, wrote:
On Apr 26, 12:33*pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38*am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep, you'll mess up a post fast with your vulgar childish remarks. |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 6:07*am, HK wrote:
wrote: On Apr 26, 12:33 pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38 am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here. It's loogy...he and his idiot brother, justhate, specialize in crapping up the newsgroup. Best thing to do with loogy is either filter him out or ignore him entirely. You won't be missing anything.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, pretty audacious of me to actually post something thats the truth. |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 8:35*am, wrote:
On Apr 27, 1:11*am, wrote: On Apr 26, 12:33*pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38*am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yep, you'll mess up a post fast with your vulgar childish remarks. Nothing vulgar at all...till you **** on the thread, dip****. |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 8:38*am, wrote:
On Apr 27, 6:07*am, HK wrote: wrote: On Apr 26, 12:33 pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38 am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here. It's loogy...he and his idiot brother, justhate, specialize in crapping up the newsgroup. Best thing to do with loogy is either filter him out or ignore him entirely. You won't be missing anything.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, pretty audacious of me to actually post something thats the truth. And we're expected to believe your drivel.... after you **** in the thread. Go back to the Magic Mirror, and ask it if you're tough... |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 9:27*am, wrote:
On Apr 27, 8:38*am, wrote: On Apr 27, 6:07*am, HK wrote: wrote: On Apr 26, 12:33 pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38 am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food...... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here. It's loogy...he and his idiot brother, justhate, specialize in crapping up the newsgroup. Best thing to do with loogy is either filter him out or ignore him entirely. You won't be missing anything.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, pretty audacious of me to actually post something thats the truth. And we're expected to believe your drivel.... after you **** in the thread. Go back to the Magic Mirror, and ask it if you're tough...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yet another post further showing how stupid, immature, vulgar and low life you are! |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 10:24*am, wrote:
On Apr 27, 9:27*am, wrote: On Apr 27, 8:38*am, wrote: On Apr 27, 6:07*am, HK wrote: wrote: On Apr 26, 12:33 pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38 am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food...... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here. It's loogy...he and his idiot brother, justhate, specialize in crapping up the newsgroup. Best thing to do with loogy is either filter him out or ignore him entirely. You won't be missing anything.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, pretty audacious of me to actually post something thats the truth. And we're expected to believe your drivel.... after you **** in the thread. Go back to the Magic Mirror, and ask it if you're tough...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yet another post further showing how stupid, immature, vulgar and low life you are! .....the mirror said THAT?????? |
Flounder Gigging
On Apr 27, 3:56*pm, wrote:
On Apr 27, 10:24*am, wrote: On Apr 27, 9:27*am, wrote: On Apr 27, 8:38*am, wrote: On Apr 27, 6:07*am, HK wrote: wrote: On Apr 26, 12:33 pm, wrote: On Apr 26, 10:38 am, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: On Sun, 26 Apr 2009 06:00:23 -0400, HK wrote: Vic Smith wrote: Heard this mentioned many times, but never did it. Pretty good video. Anybody here ever gig for flounder? I like my fish crispy fried. Flounder any good fried? http://www.seastriker.com/video/fgvideo.wmv --Vic You're kidding, right? Flounder is one of the very best table fishes, fried, baked, whatever. "Crispy," though, would be overdone for flounder, in my opinion. I have a friend in St. Augustine, FL, who gigs for flounder fairly frequently inside Matanzas Inlet there. He's a giant guy, and looks like Neptune with his three-tined fork. I tried it a couple of times, was successful once. I've only had flounder a few times. *Always baked. It is a mild fish, which I prefer. Just never heard of fried flounder. I don't care much for tricked out fish, like pompano baked with almonds. *My dad goes for that kind of thing. By "crispy" I mean the breading, not the fish. --Vic I dip flounder in an eggwash, then coat it with Italian bread crumbs, sprinkle on paprika and fry it in peanut oil. When I turn the fish, I sprinkle in a few drops of hot sauce, just a couple of drops. Great way to ruin good flounder. Coat it about an inch thick then fry the hell out of it. And you claim to be knowledgable about food..... The post WAS going civil, till this **** surfaced..... Now it stinks in here. It's loogy...he and his idiot brother, justhate, specialize in crapping up the newsgroup. Best thing to do with loogy is either filter him out or ignore him entirely. You won't be missing anything.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, pretty audacious of me to actually post something thats the truth. And we're expected to believe your drivel.... after you **** in the thread. Go back to the Magic Mirror, and ask it if you're tough...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yet another post further showing how stupid, immature, vulgar and low life you are! ....the mirror said THAT??????- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Mirrors don't talk, idiot. |
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