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I can see this...
On Thursday, January 16, 2014 6:20:28 AM UTC-6, Hank wrote:
On 1/15/2014 8:08 PM, Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 7:00:20 PM UTC-6, Earl wrote: Bluefish take a bum rap. They're fun to catch, if you're careful. If you handle them carefully and cook them properly, they make wonderful steaks and fillets. More tasty than any of the common cold water whitefish. I guess they can be... http://www.deandeluca.com/recipes/re..._onion s.aspx "Bluefish is for people who want to know that they're eating fish, not for those who feel that milder is better when it comes to seafood. Its strong hearty Flavor, oily texture, and beautiful silvery appearance are distinctive." Maybe better smoked? Like to the point of caught on fire? LOL! Hey Tim. Your computer is doing something weird with line spacing. Yeah, I think that's a product of google groups. |
I can see this...
On Thu, 16 Jan 2014 00:21:40 -0500, wrote:
On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 16:00:41 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 12:22 PM, wrote: We got into a bunch of 3' sand sharks one day and I took the big muscle down both sides from a few of them. It was pretty good too. We cut it up like scallops, breaded it and dropped it in the fryer. You would not be tricked that it was really a scallop (if you ever had one) but it was a tasty chunk of fish. I put out a tray of them at a fish fry and they went real fast. Up here a lot of folks bleed them as soon as they catch them, then cut the huge blood line out of their back and toss it. Can come to 15% of the meat, it's a huge blood line, softer texture than meat... I don't like it much, I cut it out too unless I am baking the fish. PETA alert Don't read this shark huggers! On the ones we had I noticed if they were across the gunnel, head in the boat, you could see a big muscle right down the length. I took a sharp knife and just cut out this strip on both sides and tossed them back. I laid the strip on the cutting board and skinned it. You ended up with a piece of meat that looked like a pork tenderloin. Nobody really thought it would be worth eating but they were great, Sounds like a good way to feed those other bottom feeders. |
I can see this...
On 1/16/2014 9:05 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 22:08:15 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:29 PM, Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 7:17:10 PM UTC-6, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:00 PM, Earl wrote: Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 6:25:09 AM UTC-6, Hank wrote: On 1/14/2014 10:35 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 13:11:25 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 12:17 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 11:57:38 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 08:22:27 -0500, Hank wrote: The tilapia I have tasted had an off taste to it. I can't really describe it but I didn't like it. My neighbor cooked up some wild caught tilapia for us and you could taste the difference (better). It helps, too, that he's a pretty good cook. You can usually catch Tilapia in just about any pond or road side ditch around here. I am not sure the chemicals in a golf pond are any better than what they have in Asian farm ponds. I guess they don't have the anti-biotic load and that is a good thing. I imagine the people are really worried about them taking over the lakes. Sort of like we've taken over the habitat from the woodland creatures, eh? :) The way humans behave towards each other in terms of war, avoidable famine, spread of diseases, et cetera, I'm not convinced we are the "higher species." I've seen more cooperation from the squirrels and raccoons helping each other eat along our tree line than I see from humans. Tilapia...cichlids...blech. I've pretty much given up eating "fresh water" seafood, and I'm more picky these days about salt water seafood. It's too bad because fish has always been one of my favorite "eats." If you know anyone in Central Florida see if they will get you some "Specks" (folks up north would call them Crappie). That is a plentiful native fish in most Florida lakes and they are good pan fish. In salt water, it is hard to beat a snook but you have to catch them. It is illegal to buy and sell them. Yes, I've caught both, and both are tasty. Up here, we buy fresh cod, halibut, flounder, and salmon, the latter allegedly from Alaska. Neither my wife nor I much like the taste of striped bass. When I was a kid, I used to like to catch porgies. As a little kid, I'd go out almost every morning with a retired printer from whom my parents rented a cottage. He was a hell of a fisherman. I was too small to clean the fish, so whatever I brought back, he'd clean while I watched, and I'd give at least two mealsworth to my mom to cook up. We used sandworms for bait. On the way back, we'd troll for stripers along a rocky waterfront and sometimes get lucky. One of my favorite fish in Florida was whiting, which we thought had a fine delicate taste. Easy to catch, too. Our neighbor from across the street, who was from the Philippines, would only take the heads, never the filets. She made a soup of of them. It drove her husband nutso, because the soup had the fish eyeballs floating in them, and the sight of them made him queasy, or so he claimed. Also liked kingfish and Spanish mack steaks, and all the flounder we caught under the boat docks at the marinas in St. Augustine. Florida has terrific salt-water fishing. Up here, in the Bay, it is in comparison mediocre. When I was up there Rock Fish were still rare and protected. The best catch was croakers or sea trout if you could get away from the blue fish. (fishing below Tangier Island on the cliffs) When we had a decent price on blue fish we would get some but I don't want to eat them myself. Usually we would just run from them. Bluefish take a bum rap. They're fun to catch, if you're careful. If you handle them carefully and cook them properly, they make wonderful steaks and fillets. More tasty than any of the common cold water whitefish. I guess they can be... http://www.deandeluca.com/recipes/re..._onion s.aspx "Bluefish is for people who want to know that they're eating fish, not for those who feel that milder is better when it comes to seafood. Its strong hearty Flavor, oily texture, and beautiful silvery appearance are distinctive." Maybe better smoked? Never get the smell out of the smoker:( This is the strongest fish I ever tasted... I'm not planning on cooking or eating one in the near future, Scott. So my meat smoker will be safe. It's more suited for ribs and chops anyhow.. ?;^ ) Good, never put fish in any smoker unless you want to ruin it for anything else... I do salmon in mine all the time and have never noticed a problem. I only say that because Father in Law used to say that, and when it comes to smoking meat, he was the King! I know once years ago he lent his smoker to a guy who used it for BlueFish, he just let the guy keep it and built the one I have now... |
I can see this...
On 1/16/2014 9:08 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jan 2014 00:21:40 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 16:00:41 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 12:22 PM, wrote: We got into a bunch of 3' sand sharks one day and I took the big muscle down both sides from a few of them. It was pretty good too. We cut it up like scallops, breaded it and dropped it in the fryer. You would not be tricked that it was really a scallop (if you ever had one) but it was a tasty chunk of fish. I put out a tray of them at a fish fry and they went real fast. Up here a lot of folks bleed them as soon as they catch them, then cut the huge blood line out of their back and toss it. Can come to 15% of the meat, it's a huge blood line, softer texture than meat... I don't like it much, I cut it out too unless I am baking the fish. PETA alert Don't read this shark huggers! On the ones we had I noticed if they were across the gunnel, head in the boat, you could see a big muscle right down the length. I took a sharp knife and just cut out this strip on both sides and tossed them back. I laid the strip on the cutting board and skinned it. You ended up with a piece of meat that looked like a pork tenderloin. Nobody really thought it would be worth eating but they were great, Sounds like a good way to feed those other bottom feeders. Some people up here just take a few ounces of meat from each side they call "the cheek"... and throw the entire rest of the fish back. If I can release one, I do, if not (dies coming in) I clean it and take it home... |
I can see this...
On Thu, 16 Jan 2014 10:30:07 -0500, KC wrote:
On 1/16/2014 9:05 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 22:08:15 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:29 PM, Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 7:17:10 PM UTC-6, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:00 PM, Earl wrote: Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 6:25:09 AM UTC-6, Hank wrote: On 1/14/2014 10:35 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 13:11:25 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 12:17 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 11:57:38 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 08:22:27 -0500, Hank wrote: The tilapia I have tasted had an off taste to it. I can't really describe it but I didn't like it. My neighbor cooked up some wild caught tilapia for us and you could taste the difference (better). It helps, too, that he's a pretty good cook. You can usually catch Tilapia in just about any pond or road side ditch around here. I am not sure the chemicals in a golf pond are any better than what they have in Asian farm ponds. I guess they don't have the anti-biotic load and that is a good thing. I imagine the people are really worried about them taking over the lakes. Sort of like we've taken over the habitat from the woodland creatures, eh? :) The way humans behave towards each other in terms of war, avoidable famine, spread of diseases, et cetera, I'm not convinced we are the "higher species." I've seen more cooperation from the squirrels and raccoons helping each other eat along our tree line than I see from humans. Tilapia...cichlids...blech. I've pretty much given up eating "fresh water" seafood, and I'm more picky these days about salt water seafood. It's too bad because fish has always been one of my favorite "eats." If you know anyone in Central Florida see if they will get you some "Specks" (folks up north would call them Crappie). That is a plentiful native fish in most Florida lakes and they are good pan fish. In salt water, it is hard to beat a snook but you have to catch them. It is illegal to buy and sell them. Yes, I've caught both, and both are tasty. Up here, we buy fresh cod, halibut, flounder, and salmon, the latter allegedly from Alaska. Neither my wife nor I much like the taste of striped bass. When I was a kid, I used to like to catch porgies. As a little kid, I'd go out almost every morning with a retired printer from whom my parents rented a cottage. He was a hell of a fisherman. I was too small to clean the fish, so whatever I brought back, he'd clean while I watched, and I'd give at least two mealsworth to my mom to cook up. We used sandworms for bait. On the way back, we'd troll for stripers along a rocky waterfront and sometimes get lucky. One of my favorite fish in Florida was whiting, which we thought had a fine delicate taste. Easy to catch, too. Our neighbor from across the street, who was from the Philippines, would only take the heads, never the filets. She made a soup of of them. It drove her husband nutso, because the soup had the fish eyeballs floating in them, and the sight of them made him queasy, or so he claimed. Also liked kingfish and Spanish mack steaks, and all the flounder we caught under the boat docks at the marinas in St. Augustine. Florida has terrific salt-water fishing. Up here, in the Bay, it is in comparison mediocre. When I was up there Rock Fish were still rare and protected. The best catch was croakers or sea trout if you could get away from the blue fish. (fishing below Tangier Island on the cliffs) When we had a decent price on blue fish we would get some but I don't want to eat them myself. Usually we would just run from them. Bluefish take a bum rap. They're fun to catch, if you're careful. If you handle them carefully and cook them properly, they make wonderful steaks and fillets. More tasty than any of the common cold water whitefish. I guess they can be... http://www.deandeluca.com/recipes/re..._onion s.aspx "Bluefish is for people who want to know that they're eating fish, not for those who feel that milder is better when it comes to seafood. Its strong hearty Flavor, oily texture, and beautiful silvery appearance are distinctive." Maybe better smoked? Never get the smell out of the smoker:( This is the strongest fish I ever tasted... I'm not planning on cooking or eating one in the near future, Scott. So my meat smoker will be safe. It's more suited for ribs and chops anyhow.. ?;^ ) Good, never put fish in any smoker unless you want to ruin it for anything else... I do salmon in mine all the time and have never noticed a problem. I only say that because Father in Law used to say that, and when it comes to smoking meat, he was the King! I know once years ago he lent his smoker to a guy who used it for BlueFish, he just let the guy keep it and built the one I have now... I have a feeling bluefish would foul a smoker so bad you wouldn't even want to put salmon in it. They are a strong flavored (and smelly?) fish. |
I can see this...
On 1/16/2014 11:17 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jan 2014 10:30:07 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/16/2014 9:05 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 22:08:15 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:29 PM, Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 7:17:10 PM UTC-6, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:00 PM, Earl wrote: Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 6:25:09 AM UTC-6, Hank wrote: On 1/14/2014 10:35 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 13:11:25 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 12:17 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 11:57:38 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 08:22:27 -0500, Hank wrote: The tilapia I have tasted had an off taste to it. I can't really describe it but I didn't like it. My neighbor cooked up some wild caught tilapia for us and you could taste the difference (better). It helps, too, that he's a pretty good cook. You can usually catch Tilapia in just about any pond or road side ditch around here. I am not sure the chemicals in a golf pond are any better than what they have in Asian farm ponds. I guess they don't have the anti-biotic load and that is a good thing. I imagine the people are really worried about them taking over the lakes. Sort of like we've taken over the habitat from the woodland creatures, eh? :) The way humans behave towards each other in terms of war, avoidable famine, spread of diseases, et cetera, I'm not convinced we are the "higher species." I've seen more cooperation from the squirrels and raccoons helping each other eat along our tree line than I see from humans. Tilapia...cichlids...blech. I've pretty much given up eating "fresh water" seafood, and I'm more picky these days about salt water seafood. It's too bad because fish has always been one of my favorite "eats." If you know anyone in Central Florida see if they will get you some "Specks" (folks up north would call them Crappie). That is a plentiful native fish in most Florida lakes and they are good pan fish. In salt water, it is hard to beat a snook but you have to catch them. It is illegal to buy and sell them. Yes, I've caught both, and both are tasty. Up here, we buy fresh cod, halibut, flounder, and salmon, the latter allegedly from Alaska. Neither my wife nor I much like the taste of striped bass. When I was a kid, I used to like to catch porgies. As a little kid, I'd go out almost every morning with a retired printer from whom my parents rented a cottage. He was a hell of a fisherman. I was too small to clean the fish, so whatever I brought back, he'd clean while I watched, and I'd give at least two mealsworth to my mom to cook up. We used sandworms for bait. On the way back, we'd troll for stripers along a rocky waterfront and sometimes get lucky. One of my favorite fish in Florida was whiting, which we thought had a fine delicate taste. Easy to catch, too. Our neighbor from across the street, who was from the Philippines, would only take the heads, never the filets. She made a soup of of them. It drove her husband nutso, because the soup had the fish eyeballs floating in them, and the sight of them made him queasy, or so he claimed. Also liked kingfish and Spanish mack steaks, and all the flounder we caught under the boat docks at the marinas in St. Augustine. Florida has terrific salt-water fishing. Up here, in the Bay, it is in comparison mediocre. When I was up there Rock Fish were still rare and protected. The best catch was croakers or sea trout if you could get away from the blue fish. (fishing below Tangier Island on the cliffs) When we had a decent price on blue fish we would get some but I don't want to eat them myself. Usually we would just run from them. Bluefish take a bum rap. They're fun to catch, if you're careful. If you handle them carefully and cook them properly, they make wonderful steaks and fillets. More tasty than any of the common cold water whitefish. I guess they can be... http://www.deandeluca.com/recipes/re..._onion s.aspx "Bluefish is for people who want to know that they're eating fish, not for those who feel that milder is better when it comes to seafood. Its strong hearty Flavor, oily texture, and beautiful silvery appearance are distinctive." Maybe better smoked? Never get the smell out of the smoker:( This is the strongest fish I ever tasted... I'm not planning on cooking or eating one in the near future, Scott. So my meat smoker will be safe. It's more suited for ribs and chops anyhow.. ?;^ ) Good, never put fish in any smoker unless you want to ruin it for anything else... I do salmon in mine all the time and have never noticed a problem. I only say that because Father in Law used to say that, and when it comes to smoking meat, he was the King! I know once years ago he lent his smoker to a guy who used it for BlueFish, he just let the guy keep it and built the one I have now... I have a feeling bluefish would foul a smoker so bad you wouldn't even want to put salmon in it. They are a strong flavored (and smelly?) fish. Exactly... That's why Grandpa said "no fish in smoker"... |
I can see this...
On 1/16/14, 11:17 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jan 2014 10:30:07 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/16/2014 9:05 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 22:08:15 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:29 PM, Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 7:17:10 PM UTC-6, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:00 PM, Earl wrote: Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 6:25:09 AM UTC-6, Hank wrote: On 1/14/2014 10:35 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 13:11:25 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 12:17 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 11:57:38 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 08:22:27 -0500, Hank wrote: The tilapia I have tasted had an off taste to it. I can't really describe it but I didn't like it. My neighbor cooked up some wild caught tilapia for us and you could taste the difference (better). It helps, too, that he's a pretty good cook. You can usually catch Tilapia in just about any pond or road side ditch around here. I am not sure the chemicals in a golf pond are any better than what they have in Asian farm ponds. I guess they don't have the anti-biotic load and that is a good thing. I imagine the people are really worried about them taking over the lakes. Sort of like we've taken over the habitat from the woodland creatures, eh? :) The way humans behave towards each other in terms of war, avoidable famine, spread of diseases, et cetera, I'm not convinced we are the "higher species." I've seen more cooperation from the squirrels and raccoons helping each other eat along our tree line than I see from humans. Tilapia...cichlids...blech. I've pretty much given up eating "fresh water" seafood, and I'm more picky these days about salt water seafood. It's too bad because fish has always been one of my favorite "eats." If you know anyone in Central Florida see if they will get you some "Specks" (folks up north would call them Crappie). That is a plentiful native fish in most Florida lakes and they are good pan fish. In salt water, it is hard to beat a snook but you have to catch them. It is illegal to buy and sell them. Yes, I've caught both, and both are tasty. Up here, we buy fresh cod, halibut, flounder, and salmon, the latter allegedly from Alaska. Neither my wife nor I much like the taste of striped bass. When I was a kid, I used to like to catch porgies. As a little kid, I'd go out almost every morning with a retired printer from whom my parents rented a cottage. He was a hell of a fisherman. I was too small to clean the fish, so whatever I brought back, he'd clean while I watched, and I'd give at least two mealsworth to my mom to cook up. We used sandworms for bait. On the way back, we'd troll for stripers along a rocky waterfront and sometimes get lucky. One of my favorite fish in Florida was whiting, which we thought had a fine delicate taste. Easy to catch, too. Our neighbor from across the street, who was from the Philippines, would only take the heads, never the filets. She made a soup of of them. It drove her husband nutso, because the soup had the fish eyeballs floating in them, and the sight of them made him queasy, or so he claimed. Also liked kingfish and Spanish mack steaks, and all the flounder we caught under the boat docks at the marinas in St. Augustine. Florida has terrific salt-water fishing. Up here, in the Bay, it is in comparison mediocre. When I was up there Rock Fish were still rare and protected. The best catch was croakers or sea trout if you could get away from the blue fish. (fishing below Tangier Island on the cliffs) When we had a decent price on blue fish we would get some but I don't want to eat them myself. Usually we would just run from them. Bluefish take a bum rap. They're fun to catch, if you're careful. If you handle them carefully and cook them properly, they make wonderful steaks and fillets. More tasty than any of the common cold water whitefish. I guess they can be... http://www.deandeluca.com/recipes/re..._onion s.aspx "Bluefish is for people who want to know that they're eating fish, not for those who feel that milder is better when it comes to seafood. Its strong hearty Flavor, oily texture, and beautiful silvery appearance are distinctive." Maybe better smoked? Never get the smell out of the smoker:( This is the strongest fish I ever tasted... I'm not planning on cooking or eating one in the near future, Scott. So my meat smoker will be safe. It's more suited for ribs and chops anyhow.. ?;^ ) Good, never put fish in any smoker unless you want to ruin it for anything else... I do salmon in mine all the time and have never noticed a problem. I only say that because Father in Law used to say that, and when it comes to smoking meat, he was the King! I know once years ago he lent his smoker to a guy who used it for BlueFish, he just let the guy keep it and built the one I have now... I have a feeling bluefish would foul a smoker so bad you wouldn't even want to put salmon in it. They are a strong flavored (and smelly?) fish. Everyone needs more PAHs' in their diets. :) |
I can see this...
On 1/16/2014 11:17 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Thu, 16 Jan 2014 10:30:07 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/16/2014 9:05 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Wed, 15 Jan 2014 22:08:15 -0500, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:29 PM, Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 7:17:10 PM UTC-6, KC wrote: On 1/15/2014 8:00 PM, Earl wrote: Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 6:25:09 AM UTC-6, Hank wrote: On 1/14/2014 10:35 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 13:11:25 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 12:17 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 11:57:38 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 08:22:27 -0500, Hank wrote: The tilapia I have tasted had an off taste to it. I can't really describe it but I didn't like it. My neighbor cooked up some wild caught tilapia for us and you could taste the difference (better). It helps, too, that he's a pretty good cook. You can usually catch Tilapia in just about any pond or road side ditch around here. I am not sure the chemicals in a golf pond are any better than what they have in Asian farm ponds. I guess they don't have the anti-biotic load and that is a good thing. I imagine the people are really worried about them taking over the lakes. Sort of like we've taken over the habitat from the woodland creatures, eh? :) The way humans behave towards each other in terms of war, avoidable famine, spread of diseases, et cetera, I'm not convinced we are the "higher species." I've seen more cooperation from the squirrels and raccoons helping each other eat along our tree line than I see from humans. Tilapia...cichlids...blech. I've pretty much given up eating "fresh water" seafood, and I'm more picky these days about salt water seafood. It's too bad because fish has always been one of my favorite "eats." If you know anyone in Central Florida see if they will get you some "Specks" (folks up north would call them Crappie). That is a plentiful native fish in most Florida lakes and they are good pan fish. In salt water, it is hard to beat a snook but you have to catch them. It is illegal to buy and sell them. Yes, I've caught both, and both are tasty. Up here, we buy fresh cod, halibut, flounder, and salmon, the latter allegedly from Alaska. Neither my wife nor I much like the taste of striped bass. When I was a kid, I used to like to catch porgies. As a little kid, I'd go out almost every morning with a retired printer from whom my parents rented a cottage. He was a hell of a fisherman. I was too small to clean the fish, so whatever I brought back, he'd clean while I watched, and I'd give at least two mealsworth to my mom to cook up. We used sandworms for bait. On the way back, we'd troll for stripers along a rocky waterfront and sometimes get lucky. One of my favorite fish in Florida was whiting, which we thought had a fine delicate taste. Easy to catch, too. Our neighbor from across the street, who was from the Philippines, would only take the heads, never the filets. She made a soup of of them. It drove her husband nutso, because the soup had the fish eyeballs floating in them, and the sight of them made him queasy, or so he claimed. Also liked kingfish and Spanish mack steaks, and all the flounder we caught under the boat docks at the marinas in St. Augustine. Florida has terrific salt-water fishing. Up here, in the Bay, it is in comparison mediocre. When I was up there Rock Fish were still rare and protected. The best catch was croakers or sea trout if you could get away from the blue fish. (fishing below Tangier Island on the cliffs) When we had a decent price on blue fish we would get some but I don't want to eat them myself. Usually we would just run from them. Bluefish take a bum rap. They're fun to catch, if you're careful. If you handle them carefully and cook them properly, they make wonderful steaks and fillets. More tasty than any of the common cold water whitefish. I guess they can be... http://www.deandeluca.com/recipes/re..._onion s.aspx "Bluefish is for people who want to know that they're eating fish, not for those who feel that milder is better when it comes to seafood. Its strong hearty Flavor, oily texture, and beautiful silvery appearance are distinctive." Maybe better smoked? Never get the smell out of the smoker:( This is the strongest fish I ever tasted... I'm not planning on cooking or eating one in the near future, Scott. So my meat smoker will be safe. It's more suited for ribs and chops anyhow.. ?;^ ) Good, never put fish in any smoker unless you want to ruin it for anything else... I do salmon in mine all the time and have never noticed a problem. I only say that because Father in Law used to say that, and when it comes to smoking meat, he was the King! I know once years ago he lent his smoker to a guy who used it for BlueFish, he just let the guy keep it and built the one I have now... I have a feeling bluefish would foul a smoker so bad you wouldn't even want to put salmon in it. They are a strong flavored (and smelly?) fish. That's a surprising comment based on some of the things you've cooked and eaten. P.S. I think Harry is trying to get a good Simon says game going. And you don't seem to want to play. That's OK. He's tried this before and failed when he had a mood swing. |
I can see this...
KC wrote:
On 1/15/2014 8:00 PM, Earl wrote: Tim wrote: On Wednesday, January 15, 2014 6:25:09 AM UTC-6, Hank wrote: On 1/14/2014 10:35 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 13:11:25 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 12:17 PM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 11:57:38 -0500, "F.O.A.D." wrote: On 1/14/14, 11:50 AM, wrote: On Tue, 14 Jan 2014 08:22:27 -0500, Hank wrote: The tilapia I have tasted had an off taste to it. I can't really describe it but I didn't like it. My neighbor cooked up some wild caught tilapia for us and you could taste the difference (better). It helps, too, that he's a pretty good cook. You can usually catch Tilapia in just about any pond or road side ditch around here. I am not sure the chemicals in a golf pond are any better than what they have in Asian farm ponds. I guess they don't have the anti-biotic load and that is a good thing. I imagine the people are really worried about them taking over the lakes. Sort of like we've taken over the habitat from the woodland creatures, eh? :) The way humans behave towards each other in terms of war, avoidable famine, spread of diseases, et cetera, I'm not convinced we are the "higher species." I've seen more cooperation from the squirrels and raccoons helping each other eat along our tree line than I see from humans. Tilapia...cichlids...blech. I've pretty much given up eating "fresh water" seafood, and I'm more picky these days about salt water seafood. It's too bad because fish has always been one of my favorite "eats." If you know anyone in Central Florida see if they will get you some "Specks" (folks up north would call them Crappie). That is a plentiful native fish in most Florida lakes and they are good pan fish. In salt water, it is hard to beat a snook but you have to catch them. It is illegal to buy and sell them. Yes, I've caught both, and both are tasty. Up here, we buy fresh cod, halibut, flounder, and salmon, the latter allegedly from Alaska. Neither my wife nor I much like the taste of striped bass. When I was a kid, I used to like to catch porgies. As a little kid, I'd go out almost every morning with a retired printer from whom my parents rented a cottage. He was a hell of a fisherman. I was too small to clean the fish, so whatever I brought back, he'd clean while I watched, and I'd give at least two mealsworth to my mom to cook up. We used sandworms for bait. On the way back, we'd troll for stripers along a rocky waterfront and sometimes get lucky. One of my favorite fish in Florida was whiting, which we thought had a fine delicate taste. Easy to catch, too. Our neighbor from across the street, who was from the Philippines, would only take the heads, never the filets. She made a soup of of them. It drove her husband nutso, because the soup had the fish eyeballs floating in them, and the sight of them made him queasy, or so he claimed. Also liked kingfish and Spanish mack steaks, and all the flounder we caught under the boat docks at the marinas in St. Augustine. Florida has terrific salt-water fishing. Up here, in the Bay, it is in comparison mediocre. When I was up there Rock Fish were still rare and protected. The best catch was croakers or sea trout if you could get away from the blue fish. (fishing below Tangier Island on the cliffs) When we had a decent price on blue fish we would get some but I don't want to eat them myself. Usually we would just run from them. Bluefish take a bum rap. They're fun to catch, if you're careful. If you handle them carefully and cook them properly, they make wonderful steaks and fillets. More tasty than any of the common cold water whitefish. I guess they can be... http://www.deandeluca.com/recipes/re..._onion s.aspx "Bluefish is for people who want to know that they're eating fish, not for those who feel that milder is better when it comes to seafood. Its strong hearty Flavor, oily texture, and beautiful silvery appearance are distinctive." Maybe better smoked? Never get the smell out of the smoker:( This is the strongest fish I ever tasted... If they are that bad, I'd pass. |
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