T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1690.1 | Here's my favorite Lotte recipe | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Tue Mar 28 1989 12:46 | 31 |
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One of my favorite ways of doing Lotte <monkfish> is to poach
it in white wine and then finish the sauce with cream and saffron.
The basic recipe follows,
Place the fish in a shallow baking dish lined with tin foil with
enough excess to wrap the fish in. Add about 1-2 cups of dry white
wine <depending on how much sauce you want> add your favorite herbs
to taste. I like to use Herbs de Provence. You can also add thinly
sliced onions, garlic, green peppers, ... Cover the fish with the
tin foil and seal the edges tight so you keep the steam in. Bake
for about 20-25 minutes per pound of fish <alittle more if the
fish is thick filets>. After baking pierce a hole in the foil and
drain the juices into a sauce pan. Keep fish in the foil to keep
it warm. Reduce the juices by half. Then add either 1/2 cup of heavy
cream <hitest version> or 1/2 cup of mock cream <lotest blend 2-3TBsp
of low fat cottage cheese and 1/3 Cup of low fat milk until very
smooth> boil the sauce until it reduces some and thickens slightly.
Remove from the sauce from the heat and stir one small vial of saffron.
Serve the sauce over the fish. Rice pilaf and a green salad go great
with this. I would suggest a nice gewurztraminer from Alsace or
Calif.
-mike
ps: if you are using the mock cream it will kind of curdle some
when you first put into the sauce but just boil it down some
and it will all break up so don't panic. I've done this both
ways <hitest&lotest> and it's very good either way.
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1690.2 | Cajun Catfish and Bluefish too | VLS15::NEWSTED | | Tue Mar 28 1989 14:45 | 14 |
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In note # 1358 there are some cajun fish recipies. I also included
Low calorie versions of this. This recipie calls for Catfish but
I've used it on any whitefish.
Also, last summer some friends of ours caught tons of Bluefish.
They gave us a bunch so I had to be creative...I tried a recipie
where I baked the bluefish in white wine and smothered in bacon
and thin-sliced onions. I seasoned with garlic and other herbs to
taste. oh and pour a little milk over the fish too.
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1690.3 | FISHIN' FOR RECIPES | BMT::ZARR | | Tue Mar 28 1989 16:06 | 18 |
| WE EAT FISH 3-4 TIMES A WEEK HENCE, I COOK FISH 3-4 TIMES A
WEEK. I FIND THE BEST WAY TO PREPARE IT (OF ALMOST ANY TYPE)
IS TO KEEP IT AS SIMPLE AS POSSIBLE. BROIL WITH A BIT OF LEMON
AND BUTTER, OR BAKE WITH VEGETABLES, OR BAKE WITH A BIT OF
MILK AND BUTTER. THE LATTER IS BEST ON FLESHY WHITE FISHES LIKE
SCHROD OR HALIBUT.
BUT, I DO WANT TO INCLUDE AN EXCELLENT RECIPE THAT TAKES SOME DOING.
IT'S CEVICHE. TAKE SHRIMP, SCALLOPS, OR SNAPPER CUT UP IN BITE
SIZE PIECES (OR A COMBINATION OF ALL THREE) AND PLACE THEM IN A
WIDE MOUTH JAR. ADD CIRLES OF ONION AND A FEW PIECES OF HOT RED
JUALPENO (SPELT RONG?) PEPPER AND IF YOU LIKE, A FEW PIECES OF GREEN
PEPPER. THEN ADD A LITTLE SALT AND COMPLETELY COVER THE LOT WITH
FRESH LEMON AND FRESH LIME JUICE. REFRIFGERATE OVERNIGHT AND SERVE
AS AN APPETIZER WITH CRACKERS OR BREAD. IT DOESN'T TASTE RAW.
IT'S PICKLED AND EXTREMELY REFRESHING. I KEEP IT ON HAND ALL SUMMER
LONG.
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1690.4 | Fish Parmesan | MCIS2::CORMIER | | Wed Mar 29 1989 09:18 | 18 |
| I use the following as a topping for any type of fish. Most recently
I used it on Grouper...
1 cup sour cream
1/4 cup grated romano or parmesan cheese
2 Tablespoons lemon juice
1/4 cup grated onion
a few turns of pepper (or shakes, if you don't have a mill!)
Mix it all up, pour over the fish and bake. No cover needed, since
the sour cream seals it. Depending on the type of fish, you may
end up with quite a bit of jiuce left over, which I recycle into
a stock for fish stew. The amount of baking time depends on the
type of fish and how much. For about 2 lbs, I baked at 350 for 25
mins.
Sarah
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1690.5 | | WITNES::HANNULA | Cat Tails & Bike Wheels Don't Mix | Wed Mar 29 1989 09:38 | 5 |
| Last night, I broiled haddock, then melted mozzarella cheese on
top of it. Served the fish on top of linguini with Maranara sauce.
My haddock was 1/4" thick, so cooking time for everything was only
15+/- minutes.
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1690.10 | Here's a low calorie idea! | COMET::RORENW | | Sat Apr 01 1989 11:35 | 18 |
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RE.-.1
I also make what I call "fish packets". I put the fish on
tin foil (any kind of fish) and put a *little* butter on the filets
with onion powder, a little dill and put gobs of veggies on top.
If I'm feeling lazy, I use a frozen package of mixed vegatables.
I seal the foil over the fish, and bake it for about 20 to 25 minutes.
It comes out great and it's very simple. I also put garlic on
sometimes, or tarragon, or....
I usually use orange roughy, but it's expensive in Colorado,
like all seafood. Since we fish a lot, the native walleye and perch
are also great. (Croppie too!)
Using the juice to make a sauce sounds like a good idea. I'll
have to try that!
Willa
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1690.11 | Monkfish with tomatoes and peppers | SSGBPM::COMISKEY | | Mon Apr 03 1989 16:22 | 30 |
| I saw Julia Child do this (or something like it ) to monkfish a while
back and I've since used this recipe for pollock and other types of fish.
1 lb monkfish
1 red pepper, sliced
1 green pepper, sliced
1/4 cup flour
1 clove garlic, minced
1 or two ripe tomatoes, cubed
1/2 cup dry white wine
dash of crushed red pepper (optional)
1/2 tsp dried tarragon
salt, pepper
Olive oil
Cut the fish in serving-sized chunks. Season the flour with the
salt and pepper and dredge the fish in the flour. Cook the fish
pieces in the olive oil over medium heat until brown on both sides.
Remove fish from the pan and discard oil. Heat a little more olive
oil and add the peppers and garlic and saute until the peppers begin
to get soft. Add the white wine and cook for a minute or so until
some of the wine has evaporated. Add the tomatoes, red pepper, and
tarragon and cook for about 3 minutes. Return fish to pan. Heat
through and serve it up.
If you use a nonstick skillet, you can get away with very little
oil.
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1690.12 | finally...monkfish pie... | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Wed Apr 05 1989 12:48 | 31 |
| o.k. here it is... (sorry bout the wait...)
monkfish and potato pie
8 slices bacon
2 pounds monkfish cut into 1/2 inch slices
3-4 medium size potatoes, peeled and thinly sliced
2 medium size onions, peeled and thinly sliced
salt and pepper
1 tablespoon each minced fresh thyme and marjoram
flour
3/4 heavy cream
1 basic pie pasty
preheat oven to 400 degrees f.
arrange a layer of 4 bacon slices in the bottom of a 9-inch pie plate,
top with a layer each of potato and onion slices, sprinkler with
salt, pepper and one teaspoon each thyme and marjoram. dredge the
fish slices generously in flour and arrange them over the herbs.
top with a layer each of potatoes and onions, 4 bacon slices, salt
and pepper and the remaining thyme and marjoram. pour the cream
over all and top wth pie crust slashed in several places to allow
steam to escape. bake 10 minutes, then lowr heat to 350 degrees
f. and continue to bake 35 - 45 minutes, or until crust is nicely
browned.
please let me know how it came out. thanks in advance.
carla jeanne
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1690.13 | Flounder *IS* sole! | ASDNI3::IRONS | Set out runnin', but I take my time. | Wed Apr 05 1989 13:03 | 13 |
| Carla,
Flounder IS sole. Filet of sole and flounder are the same fish.
Honest. I worked in a fish market for 4 years.
It's funny how monk fish is becoming popular just now. We (fish
market) used to sell it. That was about 8 years ago! An old Italian
guy who used to work there used to cook it with butter and bread
crumbs. It was delicious! Tasted like lobster.
I agree: Shake n Bake on fish really SUCKS!
dave
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1690.15 | Different Fish, Same Family | RICKS::BUTLER | There's more to it than fate | Sat Apr 08 1989 12:28 | 17 |
| re.13, Saying flounder and sole are the same fish didn't sound
right to me so I called my two favorite fish markets (Legal's
in Chesnut Hill and Marlboro Seafoods) and found out the following;
Grey Sole, Lemon Sole, Flounder and Halibut are all from the Flat
Fish family, the Grey Sole is usually the smallest (though it can
get larger) and has a delicate flavor compared to Flounder (Winter,
Summer or Dabs) which is sweeter, thicker and flakey. The next
which is Lemon Sole (usually 3 lbs. or over) has a stronger flavor
and then lastly would be the Halibut.
I find all this 'fish talk' both interesting and appetizing! Can
anyone reccomend a book that might explain the many varieties of
fish and offer recipies?
Thanks!
Mary Jo
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1690.16 | go to chestnut mall.... to legal! | ASABET::C_AQUILIA | | Mon Apr 10 1989 09:21 | 21 |
|
mary jo, i have just the book for you. (though i don't know why
i didn't try this book when i had the questions bout flounder)
anyhow...
i got this at legal in chestnut mall. its the great east coast
seafood book. contains 400 classic and regional recipes, plus
catching, boning, filleting, salting, smoking, grilling, poaching,
broiling, stewing, pickling, garnishing freezing and complete history
and descriptions of just about any kind of seafood imaginable.
i go claming and found this book invaluable for the hobby. though the
recipes are very rich and some of the stuff in the them you can't
always find, you can use your find tuning to figure out alternatives.
at least i do.
oh, and the book i think was $15.
hope you find it,
cja
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1690.18 | worms in fish | MAGIC::HAGGETT | | Mon Apr 10 1989 14:44 | 20 |
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Can someone give me some input on this one ??
I had bought some cod at one time and when I got home
to cook it up I found thin spaghetti like worms in it.
It whas actually about one inch long and more like the
thickness of a hair. Well disgusted w/ that I threw it
out!
The person who have me the fish said that ground fish
sometimes get worms. We slide the fish through a
flourescent light and pick them out.. sometimes we mess
some. BUT the fish is still good to eat ?
Well I don't know about you but... The thought of it makes
me kind of pale. Now this has happened to me again and
I want my money back. So, are they right?
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1690.19 | Maybe not good for cod sushi, but... | PSTJTT::TABER | It offends my freakin' dignity | Mon Apr 10 1989 14:51 | 4 |
| They are right. Cod more than nay other fish I know of tends to have
worms. They are harmless (assuming you're going to cook the fish.)
>>>==>PStJTT
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1690.20 | anyone for seconds? | SALEM::MEDVECKY | | Tue Apr 11 1989 12:49 | 9 |
| I heard that MOST salt water fish have this parasite and once
cooked, theres nothing to worry about.....fresh water fish are
also supposedly loaded with it...
I know.....its gross to know your eating a cooked parasite...I
think its linked to all the pollution we continually load into
the oceans.
Rick
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1690.21 | | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Tue Apr 11 1989 13:45 | 5 |
| I read somewhere that you can get around this by buying
several small fillets instead of one large one - maybe because they
are younger or don't go as deep??
TW
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1690.22 | | PSTJTT::TABER | It offends my freakin' dignity | Tue Apr 11 1989 15:11 | 9 |
| re:.20
I don't think the worms have much of anything to do with pollution. I've found
reference to them in leterature going back to the 1700's. It's just a fact
of life. The reason people don't like it is that we like to think of food
as a manufactured item and not as the remains of individual living beings
(as true for the lowliest carrot as it is for horse meat.)
>>>==>PStJTT
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1690.23 | on the "to try" list... | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Fri Apr 14 1989 14:29 | 18 |
| Here are two monkfish recipes I picked up at the grocery store last
night, but I wonder if boiling then broiling is redundant??
Boil & Broil - Remove skin from fillet and cut into serving size
pieces. Place pieces in boiling water for 3 minutes. Remove, rinse
under cold water. Place on broiler pan and cover with lemon butter.
Broil for 6-8 minutes or until it flakes easily.
Saute in Tomato-Wine Sauce - Salt and pepper fish lightly on eacch
side. Dredge in flour. Saute 2 minutes on each side in thin film
of hot olive oil or peanut oil. Lower heat and add 2/3 of a cup
of dry white wine, 1 1/2 cup thinly sliced onion, 1 or 2 cloves
minced garlic, 1 1/2 cups tomato pulp and 2 tablespoons tomato paste.
Sprinkle with 1/2 teaspoon tarragon. Cover and simmer 10 minutes.
Remove fish, boil down sauce until thick, adding and seasonings
desired. Serve hot with sauce.
Terry
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1690.24 | warm water=worms? | MCIS2::CORMIER | | Tue Apr 18 1989 13:48 | 13 |
| re. worms
Not to continue a rather unappetizing discussion, but my husband
is an avid sea-fisherman, and will not bring home any cod he catches
after August. He says the waters are too warm and the fish have
too many worms. He filets the fish right at the pier before he
brings them home, and I have never seen any worms in any of the
fish he brings home. He will bring home other types of fish late
in the summer, but never cod. I guess this is a common belief among
fisherman, and it may be another quaint custom with no basis in
fact...
Sarah
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1690.25 | Roasted Monkfish with Leeks | OFSIDE::SHAIN | | Mon Sep 23 1991 11:45 | 19 |
| I had this for dinner last week, it's really good! This was the first time I
had monkfish!
Roasted Monkfish with Leeks
1 1/4 lbs leeks
3 Tbs. butter
3/4 cup heavy cream
Dash hot red-pepper sauce
Salt and pepper
1 1/2 lbs monkfish fillet
Wash leeks well and chop them. Melt butter in a frying pan over medium-low
heat. Add leeks, cover and cook 30 minutes. Add cream, raise heat to medium
and cook until thickened, about 3 minutes. Stir in hot-pepper sauce and 1/2
tsp salt. Taste leeks and add salt and pepper if needed. Heat oven to
450 degrees. Sprinkle monkfish with salt and pepper and bake until opaque
in the center, about 15 minutes. Divide leeks among 4 plates. Slice
monkfish and put on top of the leeks. Sprinkle with peppper, if you wish.
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