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Fish
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Camera_BagintheUK
Posts: 707 Member
I was veggie for about 25 years but have gone back to eating meat and fish now.
I like fish but could really do with some ideas (ed) since I don't really have much experience of cooking fish - and preferably using sustainable fish varieties. I'm getting bored (and feel guilty) of baking salmon fillets in foil, or making tuna pasta.
I like fish but could really do with some ideas (ed) since I don't really have much experience of cooking fish - and preferably using sustainable fish varieties. I'm getting bored (and feel guilty) of baking salmon fillets in foil, or making tuna pasta.
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Replies
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I cook my salmon in unbleached parchment paper, papillote style and throw vegies on top. You don't need anything to season if you don't want. I regularly cook other fish the same way, most commonly black cod, mahi mahi, tilapia (also on the stove to make fish tacos) and halibut. I check out the monterey aquariums sustainability guide before buying fish, and go to either whole foods or a high end fish market close to me to buy it.
Note, I'm bad with wrapping papillote, therefore I literally staple that sucker closed. I keep a stapler in my kitchen drawer. Use it more than my can opener. ;-)0 -
slow cooking the fish over low heat will give you much better results
also why not use dif types of citrus glaze like grapefruit, lime, lemon, pomelo
Maybe do a white wine reduction with shallot and garlic, or toss in some fresh Greek oregano or a dif direction with Thai basil give it that anise flavor or do a lemon tarragon.
Fish taco with cilentro, cumin and oregano some fresh chili's maybe even some salsa verde!
or do a Jamaican fish curry or switch that up for a Thai green Fish Curry soup
lots and lots of possibilities0 -
Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch is a great resource for choosing "ocean-friendly" seafood. http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/cr_seafoodwatch/sfw_recommendations.aspx
I like to bread fish (tilapia, sole, halibut, etc) in a mixture of almond meal, dried herbs, and salt and pepper and then bake it.0 -
Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch is a great resource for choosing "ocean-friendly" seafood. http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/cr_seafoodwatch/sfw_recommendations.aspx
I like to bread fish (tilapia, sole, halibut, etc) in a mixture of almond meal, dried herbs, and salt and pepper and then bake it.
using crushed nuts is a good idea but I would add toasting them before crusting them onto the fish and still using a slow cook method over low heat.0 -
Marinate tuna steaks in garlic, soy, ginger, lime, chilli and sesame oil, then grill or griddle them (you can do the same with salmon). You can also do a yummy marinade for tuna with garlic, olive oil, lemon and rosemary (the rosemary sounds odd but it works!). I'd also say pan fry sea bass fillets, but whenever I try to do this it goes wrong and all the skin comes off!
ETA you can find sustainable varieties of most of these - go for line caught. Organic farmed salmon is best for salmon, I believe. I avoid the wild stuff and bargain basement ones like the plague.0 -
Not sure if this would work for you, but one of my favorite ways to eat fish is to take a white fish, like tilapia, then spread on some dijon, wrap it in prosciutto, and cook it in a pan with just enough olive oil to keep from sticking. Teriyaki / asian marinaded salmon is something you can never go wrong with either, though I've taken to just pan searing it with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and a bit of ground mustard.0
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usually i have salmon with green pesto on. but goes well with other fish.
Trout is an amazing fish, i usually do trout with a beetroot and leaf salad and horseradish mixed in creme fraiche. yummy0 -
I eat A LOT of fish. I usually just bake it in the oven with some olive oil, lemon, and onion or whatever else I fancy. I also tend to rely on Ocean Wise for info on sustainable fish. http://www.oceanwise.ca/0
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River cobbler fillets from Asda are great. Just fry them with some black pepper0
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Teriyaki is a great flavor profile for Tuna! Lemon/dill for salmon or a brown sugar/soy type of thing works great as well. I prefer to pan sear my tuna and broil salmon in the oven. I'm making an interesting dish I found on food network tonight - Sicilian Pasta w/Eggplant and Swordfish (I'm using mahi mahi instead of swordfish b/c that's what was in the freezer haha) which looks really good!
Fish tacos with tilapia! Or italian seasoned tilapia shredded over a nice salad is great too.
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mmmmm Mouth watering! There's a fishmongers near me, he'll be shut now, but I'll pop up there tomorrow I think....0
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