Frozen fish
MissMonicaC4
Posts: 279 Member
Hey lovely people! Happy friday! I am working on my meal plan to go shopping tomorrow. and I want to incorporate more fish ... I can never cook it right..it gets watery and honestly its awful. I try to purchase the wild caught ect but its not in my budget to buy fresh.(cant wait to fish for my own!) Where I live its around 25 or more sometimes for not the biggest portions so I prefer to stick with frozen...tips and tricks/kinds of fish to work with plz. Any tips would be great.
0
Replies
-
Soups! Not necessarily heavy chowders, but lighter, broth-based fish soups can be wonderful.0
-
Frozen salmon and frozen tilapia are what I keep on hand. Either steam or griddle will do well.0
-
I buy the flash frozen varieties at Costco all of the time! Even some of the pre-seasoned ones are not too bad calorie wise (the pesto tilapia is awesome!). I will typically follow the cooking directions on the bag...add some lemon, salt and pepper and enjoy! It is also good with Teriyaki sauce (small amount) if you have the calories to spare for it. Tonight we had salmon, my husband made a marinade with soy sauce, Dijon mustard and garlic. Then he bbq'd it. It was good!0
-
I buy the olivia brand from costco I believe...i wish I could enjoy salmon but its not my thing. I like haddock..cod..sometimes rainbow trout and now basa.0
-
This content has been removed.
-
Oh thats a nice idea. Ill half to find a steaming contraption haha0
-
I buy shrink wrapped. Costco has great brand. Defrost in cold water. Season well. Add lemon and fresh herbs. I rinse and dry fish. Spray with olive oil then season.then fry on medium heat with teaspoon olive oil.MissMonicaC4 wrote: »Hey lovely people! Happy friday! I am working on my meal plan to go shopping tomorrow. and I want to incorporate more fish ... I can never cook it right..it gets watery and honestly its awful. I try to purchase the wild caught ect but its not in my budget to buy fresh.(cant wait to fish for my own!) Where I live its around 25 or more sometimes for not the biggest portions so I prefer to stick with frozen...tips and tricks/kinds of fish to work with plz. Any tips would be great.
0 -
I think defrosting first could help and patting any moisture off. Ive just been tossing it in the oven and letting it go. Ill add spices of course but yah haha fish is not my specialty. I will try this week though.0
-
This works great for me. I use olive oil spray on stovetop and cook for 2-3 minutes each side or until it starts to split a little bit or flaky. Hope this helps.0
-
I buy frozen tilapia at Costco and I actually cook it in the microwave! I used to steam it on the stove top, but I think it turns out just as good (maybe better?) using this method, and it's so fast. I was pretty dubious that this would work but read some rave reviews online when I searched "microwave fish" and figured I had nothing to lose, and now it's my go-to method. Believe me, I don't typically think of cooking meat in the microwave...
You don't thaw your fish, just take it out of the package and put it in a microwave-safe dish (I use a glass pyrex dish) and put some liquid in the bottom (I use the juice of one lemon; you could try lime juice or white wine, I bet!). I season mine with Singapore Spice seasoning from Penzey's and some salt and pepper (haha again, use whatever spices you like) then cover the dish with plastic wrap and microwave until done. In my pretty powerful microwave, this takes about 5 minutes depending on the thickness of the fish filet. It always comes out really moist and flavorful, and cooks more evenly than when I steam it in a steamer on a pot of boiling water. Great with a salad for a fast meal!0 -
This content has been removed.
-
Ohh now that looks pretty awesome! Thanks0
-
Salmon, patted dry, seasoned with salt and pepper. Heat oven to 450. Heat up a tsp of Olive Oil in cast iron or any oven safe pan until it hits it's smoke point. Put it on the piping hot pan skin side up for 90 seconds, and flip and put on the hot oven for 7 minutes.
It'll be just how you want it0 -
I LOVE fish tacos! not with fried fish though. I saute tilapia with garlic, oregano, cumin, paprika and chili powder (you don't even need oil because of the water from the fish). I also make a really good sour cream (fat free) sauce with lime juice, paprika, and cilantro. Add lettuce, tomato and onion and its a full meal. SOO good with black beans and rice! I've also used the leftover fish / sour cream sauce in salad the next day.0
-
I bake or pan fry mine, use a dry spice mix rather than a sauce.0
-
Using either a microwave or in a pan on the stove, I have poached frozen tilapia or flounder in some orange juice, then discard the OJ and garnish with some fresh orange slices. This means no extra oil. When I have tried cooking frozen fish in the microwave dry, it comes out tough and unappetizing. Even just a little low sodium vegetable broth is good for microwave poaching. I don't bother with eating the broth. I've done the vegetable broth poaching with salmon and it was moist and flaky when done.0
-
Most all fish is frozen at some point. It's put on ice on the fishing boats and unless you live near the ocean and/or caught it yourself, you don't really know. We mostly buy frozen filets but will hit our fishmonger or Asian grocery for whole fish to grill.0
-
All these ideas are making me hungry haha0
-
I put my frozen fish in foil parcels topped with lemon, onion, parsley and oregano, then bake in the oven. So quick and easy0
-
I buy the flash frozen varieties at Costco all of the time! Even some of the pre-seasoned ones are not too bad calorie wise (the pesto tilapia is awesome!). I will typically follow the cooking directions on the bag...add some lemon, salt and pepper and enjoy! It is also good with Teriyaki sauce (small amount) if you have the calories to spare for it. Tonight we had salmon, my husband made a marinade with soy sauce, Dijon mustard and garlic. Then he bbq'd it. It was good!
yes us too but I do it all in a foil packet and put in oven for five to six minutes. or so.. its done when it flakes with fork. doesnt take long really. if you must go with frozen: i suggest the gordons grill filets. they have a tasty blackened one.0 -
I make my straight out of the freezer and the texture is just as nice as any fine dining restaurant I have been to. I just put it on a griddle with spices on slightly lower heat than normal to begin with (mostly salmon and tilapia).0
-
Canned Seafood in Water or Olive Oil are GREAT choices and easy to slip into your diet! Mix them with avocado or sun-dried tomatoes pack in olive oil. SO GOOD! Forget the mayo - think outside of the box!0
-
I love getting the wild frozen tuna, halibut, and salmon from Costco. I cooked it in a pot with water, garlic, and a little salt at the lowest heat until fully cooked and tender, then I flake it into a container and keep it in the fridge to eat for a few days. I mix it with avocado, mustard, and sometimes a little raw sauerkraut or pickles (either one for the probiotics). It's so much nicer than canned fish.0
-
20yearsyounger wrote: »I make my straight out of the freezer and the texture is just as nice as any fine dining restaurant I have been to. I just put it on a griddle with spices on slightly lower heat than normal to begin with (mostly salmon and tilapia).
I think she's baking it from frozen which would come out slightly different than a griddle I try to thaw mine no matter what I'm doing but I don't worry too much about it if it's still a bit hard.
I like fish because it's so nice and flaky that it's easy to tell when it's done!0 -
I love salmon, but find the smell of it cooking puts me off... unless I poach it. Defrost first, make sure you season the water you are using to poach it (usually I use lemon, onion and garlic) Then I will put together a "sauce" based in greek yogurt. So much protien and so yummy.0
-
i like salmon, tuna or basa but i always defrost it overnight in the fridge. i pan fry it dry with a sqeeze of lemon , usualy it goes watery but after a couple of mins it drys up again .0
-
I buy the flash frozen varieties at Costco all of the time! Even some of the pre-seasoned ones are not too bad calorie wise (the pesto tilapia is awesome!). I will typically follow the cooking directions on the bag...add some lemon, salt and pepper and enjoy! It is also good with Teriyaki sauce (small amount) if you have the calories to spare for it. Tonight we had salmon, my husband made a marinade with soy sauce, Dijon mustard and garlic. Then he bbq'd it. It was good!
+ another on Costco. I buy the frozen bags of Salmon, Cod and Mahi Mahi. The filets of fish are individually vacuum sealed so you can easily take just what you need from the bag.0 -
My local costco doesnt have the tuna steaks anymore they were my fave cooked with lemon juice and lemon pepper. Mmm.0
-
Depending on where you are the "fresh" kind was probably frozen and then thawed anyway. Wild-caught salmon is going to be flash frozen before it's shipped to the store that sells it.
I get lots of frozen fish and just thaw it in my refrigerator before cooking it, and it doesn't affect how I cook it or how tasty it is.0 -
0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions