T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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747.1 | | FDCV03::KELLIHER | | Fri Oct 02 1987 14:01 | 6 |
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One small addition I use when I bake fish is to add slices of fresh
tomato with some parseley on top. I put this on top of the
breadcrumbs, and it seems to moisten and flavor the dish very nicely.
Diane
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747.3 | SIMPLE HADDOCK | MORGAN::CORLISS | | Fri Oct 02 1987 17:22 | 16 |
| One simple but delicious recipe I make is with very fresh haddock. I
have personal preference for fresh fish - frozen just doesn't make
it in my book.
First, rinse the fish in cool water, then place in a baking dish.
Lightly cover with lemon juice, then some sort of white wine (I
use whatever is handy). Then, I saute anywhere from 2 to 5 cloves
of garlic in about 1/2 stick of margarine very slowly on low heat.
When garlic is slightly browned, pour entire contents over
fish/lemon/wine. Seasonings - top it off with fresh basil, pepper
and a great seaesoning Lemon/Pepper.
Broil for 10-15 minutes depending on thickness of fish.
Enjoy!
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747.4 | A couple of Easy/Good Fish Bakes | PECOCK::WHITTALL | thatthatisisthatthatisnotisnot | Mon Oct 05 1987 12:10 | 25 |
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Recipe #1
---------
Butter baking dish. Add 4 serving pieces of fish fillet (haddock-
cod) salt, pepper and paprika. Warm 1 can Campbell's Cream of
Shrimp Soup. Pour over fish. Bake 20 minutes at 350...
Recipe #2
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In small frying pan, put 1 TBLS butter and one small onion chopped.
Cut celery stalk and saute all three; but don't brown.
In a 9" baking pan grease and lay serving size pieces of fish.
Add frying pan mixture, salt and pepper. Add 1 can of frozen
cream of shrimp soup that has been thawed. Put more butter
(1/2 stick) and 1 cup bread crumbs to pan you just used. Mix
them together and add to top of fish. Sprinkle a little
Parmesan cheese ove the top. Bake in preheated 350 (F) degree
oven for 30 minutes.
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747.5 | Two Easy Fish Recipes | SAGE::DOWNING | Rena Downing | Mon Oct 05 1987 13:38 | 15 |
| My favorite way of doing haddock (or any other white fish) is to
thinly slice lemon and layer fish and lemon in a dish, then steam
it. You can add a little butter and freshly cracked pepper if you
want to, but it is really moist and flavorful with just the lemon.
When I want swordfish prepared a little differently, I take a tomato
(peeled and chopped), 1 scallion (with greens) chopped and basil;
cook that in a little olive oil. Broil your swordfish on one side
and and put the tomato mixture on top of the fish when you turn it
to finish cooking on the second side.
Both of these are quick and easy. Important when we're all working!
:-) RHD
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747.6 | My contribution | USMRW7::JFERGUSON | What doesn't kill you, makes you stronger | Mon Oct 05 1987 16:23 | 29 |
| Recipe #1
Place a piece of cod or haddock in a baking dish.
Cover with salsa/taco sauce
Top with:
thinly sliced onion rings
or grated cheese
Recipe #2
In bowl #1 combine:
1/4 to 1/2 cup oil
2-4 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce (to taste)
3-4 dashes Tabasco
In bowl #2 combine:
fresh breadcrumbs (4 slices for 1.5-2 lbs. fish)
1/4 cup Parmesan cheese
1/2 teaspoon paprika
Dip fish in oil mixture. Coat with crumb mixture. Place in a
baking dish and dot with butter. Bake at 350* for 10-20 minutes,
depending on the thickness of the fish. Five minutes before it
is finished, top with chopped pecans.
Enjoy,
Judy
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747.7 | ITALIAN BROILED FISH | CLOSUS::LAPIERRE | | Mon Oct 05 1987 18:38 | 17 |
|
I take a touch of olive oil and spread it evenly with my finger
on both sides of the fish. Sprinkle with italian seasoning and
pepper. You can add lemon or tomatoes or garlic to it if you want.
Broil both sides until done. The usual formula - 1" thick 4 minutes
each side - add a minute each side for every 1/2".
For you cholesterol watches, olive oil has the good stuff in it
to lower you cholesterol level and keeps things moist.
It's easy and tastes great. In colorado we're able to get a kind
of fish called Orange Roughy (Comes from New Zealand I think) It's
the best fish I think I've ever had and I'm originally from New
England.
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747.8 | Two easy marinades | PARROT::GALVIN | | Mon Oct 05 1987 19:28 | 13 |
|
I like to marinate fish in white wine, mustard, and garlic for a
couple of hours, then coat it with a little bit of olive oil, grind
pepper on top, and stick it under the broiler. I vary the proportions
of the ingredients. Sometimes, I add tarragon.
Another marinade I occasionally use is rice wine vinegar, ginger,
a little bit of ginger, and scallions. Before broiling the fish,
I coat it with sesame oil for an Asian flavor.
Enjoy!
Susie
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747.9 | Turkish and Procencale | MUGSY::GLANTZ | Mike | Tue Oct 06 1987 06:40 | 38 |
| Turkish (From the memory of a Turkish friend's recipe)
Fish filet: enough for 2 people (1/2 to 3/4 lb), preferably an oily fish,
like bluefish or mackerel
Lemon Juice: couple of tsp
Onion: 2 to 4 thin slices
Tomato Paste: 2 to 4 tsp
Salt: optional, to taste
Tabasco Sauce: a dash or two (or three or four or ...)
Bay Leaf: One or two whole
Oregano, Thyme, Rosemary: to taste, none if you prefer
Butter: 1 to 2 tsp
Put the fish on a large piece of foil. Spread all the other ingredients
on top. Seal it up, put it in a large pan, and stick in preheated oven
(425) until it's done (I check it after about 20 minutes).
======================================================================
Proven�ale (loup grill�)
Cleaned, scaled fish with head and tail removed (best is a
medium-flavored salt water fish - the fish used in Provence
is Loup, which is sea bass)
Fennel seed (and dried stems, if available): 2 to 3 tsp
Olive oil: to oil pan and fish (use extra virgin - you have to taste it!)
Salt: optional, to taste
Pepper: a few twists, to taste
Rub the fish inside and out with olive oil. Sprinkle all over with
salt and pepper. Fill cavity with fennel seed and stems. Broil in
oiled pan about 5 to 7 minutes each side (depending on size).
========================================================================
Recommended wines:
Italian: Pinot Grigio, Soave, or Orvietto (only the dry)
French: Muscadet, Chablis, dry white Graves, or (especially) Cotes de
Provence rose
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747.10 | Slight variation on breadcrumbs | OZONE::OHARE | | Tue Oct 06 1987 13:50 | 3 |
| My mother used to beat an egg together with some milk, then dip
haddock filets in the egg mixture and then in crushed saltine
crackers. Then just bake in the oven til done!
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747.11 | Cold poached salmon | COLORS::WALKER | | Wed Oct 07 1987 14:58 | 10 |
| My favorite is cold poached salmon. It can be prepared a day ahead
and is great for a champagne brunch. Poach a whole salmon (head
removed) in water to cover, which has added to it 1/2 c white wine,
pepper, quartered onion, and a celery stalk. The water should be
brought to a boil, then reduce to a simmer and add the fish. Simmer
covered about 10 minutes, until flakes. It can be eaten warm, but
is great served cold with a little bernaise sauce. If you don't
need a whole fish (serves 6 for two meals, one warm and one cold,
we have it at Thanksgiving sometimes) you can just use the steaks.
Enjoy!
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747.12 | Penny pinching?? | ROLL::IRONS | Sunshine daydream | Thu Oct 08 1987 09:57 | 19 |
| You should try using pollock (sometimes called Boston blue fish)
instead of haddock or cod. It tastes the same but cost much less.
It is a big fish like cod so you may get a nice thick piece for
baking. It is also darker in color before it's cooked but turns
mostly white after it's cooked. I very seldom buy cod or haddock.
I've served it to other people (including my sometimes picky father)
and they enjoy it very much.
WARNING!!!
Don't ever get lazy and try Shake & Bake for fish. It's horrible!!
It tastes so artificial it's ridiculous!
I just usually use Progresso italian bread crumbs, butter, lemon
juice and lemon/pepper seasoning salt.
dave
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747.13 | | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | | Fri Oct 09 1987 23:01 | 18 |
|
I use this for any white fish. Below is what the recipe calls for
but after awhile measurements are according to personal tastes.
1lb. scrod or scallops
1 clove garlic
sprinkle of oregano
3/4-1 c. crushed Ritz crackers (I usually use stoned wheat crackers)
3/4 stick butter
1/2 c. white or sherry wine
Melt butter. Put fish in one layer in casserole. Sprinkle with garlic
and oregano. Pour wine over fish. Cover with crushed crackers. Pour
butter over crackers.
Bake at 425 for 15-20 min.
Kathy
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747.14 | Millions of Japanese can't be wrong! | DIEHRD::MAHLER | Yugo's for Yo Yo's | Mon Oct 12 1987 13:24 | 24 |
|
Cooking Salmon? Blasphomy I tell you! 8-}
1 Tablespoon Shoyu [Tamari]
1 Tablespoon Sake [Japanese Rice Wine]
1 long scallion [use the entire vegetable] chopped finely
1 quarter size chunk of ginger root choppped finely
1 clove garlic chopped, you guessed it, finely.
Stuff inside of cleaned fish [head removed only] with Eel
that has been baked until well done. Wrap fish with seaweed
[nori] that covers the mid section and not the tail.
Place whole fish in a deep baking dish. Pour mixture over fish.
Sprinkle top of the fish with paprika and also salt the fins and
tail. Place fish in broiler or bake at 450 until done [depends on
size of the fish].
Use a ponzu sauce for dipping. This is the sauce that's at the
bottom of the pan with 1/2 teaspoon of hot oil [sesame oil with
red pepper] added and stirred.
Best fish you'll ever have!
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747.16 | | DIEHRD::MAHLER | Yugo's for Yo Yo's | Tue Oct 13 1987 18:16 | 8 |
|
MAJOR MISTAKE! Sorry about that.
Stuff with the Eel and THEN cook until well done. My
brain melted last week.
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747.17 | Baked fish that is really moist and tasty | PULSAR::CFIELD | Corey | Wed Oct 14 1987 17:24 | 4 |
| Another great way to prepare fish is to rub the fish well on outside
with lofat mayonaise the roll in Ritz Cracker crumbs. Bake in oven
for 20 minutes (or until done) at 350 degrees. No fishy smell either!
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747.18 | how's this for easy? | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Thu Oct 29 1987 09:14 | 5 |
|
Take some COD fillets and put in loosely sealed aluminum foil with
margarine and dillweed. Cook on charcoal grill. mmmmmmmmmmm!
Theresa.
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747.19 | A couple more... | HPSVAX::MANDALINCI | | Mon Nov 16 1987 14:32 | 26 |
| Recipe #1
Marinate shrimp and steak fish in extra vigin olive oil, crushed
garlic, pepper, a little thyme and some fresh chopped parsley for about
an hour
and then grill. We usually use the outdoor grill but broiling would
be just as nice with a lighted taste. Baste with any extra oil as
it cooks.
Recipe #2
For really any fish or scallops, broil in a little lemon and
white wine until half way cooked. Flip the fish over or give the
scallops a stir. Baste with melted butter and then cover lightly
with italian bread crumbs. The crumbs will stick to and absorb the
butter to allow them to "toast" up.
Recipe #3
Coat fish filets with flour. I normally use a brazillian flour
which has a courser texture. You could use finely crushed cracker
crumbs over flour for more flavor. Saute in a large pan with extra
virgin olive oil, just enough to coat the pan. Cook on a higher
heat to seal the outside and keep the fish moist. Tip: cook the
filets one at a time. It will be easier to work with in the pan.
Serve with a lemon wedge. Light and simple.
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747.20 | bake in fruit juice | LUDWIG::GAUTHIER | Stop and Think | Wed Feb 21 1990 15:26 | 12 |
| Put whitefish (cod, hadock, pollock etc...) in a basting pan and
dump about on inch's worth of OJ right on top. Then top with whatever
your preference is... (ritz crackers mixed with minced raisins is
my favorite). The flavor of the OJ gets boiled right into the fish.
Another one (which is kind of off the wall a litle) is to bake in
crandberry juice. The fish actually gets stained purple. Contrary
to what you might think, the crandberry flavor ends up being quite mild.
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747.21 | Bake in milk and then broil. | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Wed Feb 21 1990 16:10 | 15 |
| Right off the perch package, this recipe worked wonderfully.
It'd probably be good for any type of fillet.
Put fish in a shallow baking pan (I lined it with foil for easy
cleaning) and pour milk in to 1/4 inch deep. Bake at 325 for
10-12 min. Pour milk off (I gave it to our cats after cooling
it). Top fish with breadcrumbs (crushed croutons or stuffing
mix or seasoned flour are fine) and dot with butter (I used very
little - probably 1-2 tsp total). Broil for 2-3 minutes or until
topping is browned.
The fish came out nice and moist with a crisp topping and was
delicious. Much lower in calories than fried fish, too.
--Louise
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747.22 | Halibut steak with salsa | ROBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Wed Jan 06 1993 16:08 | 34 |
| I experimented (again) last night, and it was pretty good.
HALIBUT STEAK WITH SALSA
1 Halibut steak, about 1" thick
1/2 cup mild chunky salsa
1 bottle clam juice*
1/8 tsp thyme
1/8 tsp celery seed
1/4 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp parsley flakes
1 Tbsp E.V. olive oil
cayenne pepper to taste
PAM a deep covered skillet that's just big enough to hold the
halibut steak flat. Wash the steak and lay it in the skillet. Pour
the clam juice over the steak, then give the steak a pinch of
thyme. Cover the pan tightly, and poach the steak with just
enough heat to keep the broth simmering (I use an electric
skillet). (*Depending on the size of the steak and the size of the
skillet, there should be clam broth about half way up the sides of
the steak.)
In a small glass bowl, combine the salsa, celery seed, parsley,
olive oil, the remainder of the thyme, sugar, and the cayenne
pepper. Heat the mixture in the microwave until the salsa veggies
wilt just a bit. You could do this in a stove-top sauce pan.
After the fish steak has had about 5 minutes of simmering, check
the fish; if it flakes, spread the salsa mixture generously over
the fish, return the cover, and simmer for about another
minutes-minute and a half. Remove to a heated plate and enjoy with
golden corn kernels and a green salad on the side.
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