Tilapia Recipes
Replies
-
Ceviche
Tilapia, cilantro, lime juice, pico de Gallo, dash hot sauce or chopped jalapeño.
Dice fish and let marinate in above mixture for 20-30 mins and enjoy. Easy peasy0 -
pinggolfer96 wrote: »Ceviche
Tilapia, cilantro, lime juice, pico de Gallo, dash hot sauce or chopped jalapeño.
Dice fish and let marinate in above mixture for 20-30 mins and enjoy. Easy peasy
Not only is tilapia IMHO at a very bottom of a type of fish to eat (cheap farmed and garbage eater) but you are suggesting to make a ceviche out of it? Come on.
OP. If you insist on making it simply sprinkle salt and pepper on it, smear mayo on top and sprinkle with cheese. Bake at 400F for few minutes until done.
To each there own...
2 -
Tilapia is one of the more sustainable and healthy fish to eat. "Bottom feeders" are actually better for you than those fish on the top of the food chain. Swordfish and other predatory fish at the top of the food chain are much higher in mercury.2
-
I like to just use lemon juice, dried dill, and some paprika. I let it marinate a few hours then cook it in a frying pan on medium for about 2-3 minutes on each side. I just use cooking spray for the pan, but olive oil is even better if you have the calories to spare1
-
I just made tilapia tonight for dinner. So, you know those packets of seasoning that you can buy? The ones that say to mix it with oil, water or whatever and use it as a marinade? Well, you can just sprinkle it on your fish because they're just seasonings after all and they come in several different yummy flavors which makes each one a new recipe! I wash the filet, pat it dry, add the seasoning, then pan fry it spraying olive oil in the pan (I hate greasy food so very little oil for me). Then I make a dip/sauce out of Mexican Crema which is only 60 cals for 2 tablespoons. I add cilantro, onion, garlic, jalapeno and lime, all to taste..i put one tablespoon on top of the fish.I also use it as a dip and add it to canned spinach and OMG, it's so yummy! I keep a container in the fridge and use it for tons of foods. Anyway, tonight I had tilapia with zoodles with grape tomatoes, garlic, onion and an alfredo sauce thats 50 calories for 1/4 cup.. I would add a pic but I don't see a way to do it..0
-
pinggolfer96 wrote: »Ceviche
Tilapia, cilantro, lime juice, pico de Gallo, dash hot sauce or chopped jalapeño.
Dice fish and let marinate in above mixture for 20-30 mins and enjoy. Easy peasy
Not only is tilapia IMHO at a very bottom of a type of fish to eat (cheap farmed and garbage eater) but you are suggesting to make a ceviche out of it? Come on.
OP. If you insist on making it simply sprinkle salt and pepper on it, smear mayo on top and sprinkle with cheese. Bake at 400F for few minutes until done.
Had to laugh at this one! I love almost all fish, but tilapia is not one of them. I know it's all the rage these days, but I think it tastes weirdly "off". I would really not want to eat a ceviche made with it.
I watched a documentary about how they're raised in fish farms and they basically just leave them in the tanks to eat all the poo from the other fish. Guess that's what a bottom feeder is? I think it's a cheap fish that is abundant and affordable, but I'd rather have a top feeder with a slight higher bit of mercury. (not sure if that mercury bit is even true as the poster didn't cite a reputable reference)
Slather away with a bunch of mayo and I'm sure it's sort of palatable.
1 -
To be a smart *kitten*, throw in the trash. There are much better fish choices out there.
To your question season and bake, bbq, fry3 -
My husband refuses to eat tilapia after reading about how they are farmed. This is my mom's fish recipe that works for any fish. I have made it with all kinds of fish including whole carp, whole salmon trouts and frozen tilapia fillets. Good enough for a dinner party and you can't even tell if you accidentally break the fish fillets.
Chinese contact fried fish.
Finely chop a thumb of ginger and 4 or 5 green onions. You can do this a few hours in advance if you put the ginger under the green onions in a deep bowl to prevent it from discoloring. When you want to eat, poach the fish in acidulated water until done. Put into a serving dish with a rim and scatter the ginger and green onion on top. Squeeze a few wedges of lemon, and douse with a few glugs of soy sauce and a good glug of sake or dry vermouth. Sprinkle with a large pinch of sugar. Bring the fish to the table. Heat up a quarter cup of vegetable oil in a small saucepan until it starts to smoke. Carefully pour over the herbs to blend the flavours. There will be a lot of dramatic sizzling sounds.1 -
-
sometimes I just like it with garlic salt and rubbed sage. It is my go to lazy recipe. I do the pico de gallo, lime, and cilantro too. A lot of times I mix that in with rice also.
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