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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Posts: 396
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Again, thank you Yani. I will be trying this out....hopefully soon.
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#2 |
Olivenhain Bob
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Olivenhain, CA
Posts: 1,122
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Yani,
I do not see the cuts along the lateral line in your photos. Do you do that from the other side? Bob |
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#3 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
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Bob,
I would never cut out the dark meat. That was the whole point of my sermon... But, refer to the first pic in this post. Look at my steaks. See the cross section? You can see the dark meat you want to cut out. It runs along the fish's lateral line. It's in a V shape. Then follow my directions and you'll have Yellowtail Steaks without the dark meat and its nutrients. If you insist on not eating the nutrient rich, life giving, viagra like, dark meat, boil it, freeze it, then bring it out when you need chum when bait is hard to come by. |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 478
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This is one of those posts I will go back to over and over. Thank you for writing it. The only question I have is about the 24 hour icing. I made sushi with my YT this week just a few hours after catching it. Yum. What would icing for 24 hours have changed?
Now I just need a fish to try it on. Tomorrow maybe? |
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#5 |
.......
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,509
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This is kinda gross but if your talking sushi or sashimi technically it does two things, one the flesh decomposes a bit which "ages" it which makes it more tender, with a better flavor, and two some of the parasites that might be present in the flesh cant survive in dead flesh so they die.
Personally I gut my fish, cut off their heads and tails wrap them in newspaper and freeze them whole. Then thaw them out and cut them up for sashimi which seasons the fish as well and in theory limits your exposure to bad things like parasites. Jim |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: La Jolla
Posts: 94
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Icing fish.
In general icing a whole fish for a day or two is going to help firm up the meat making it easier to fillet. YT are pretty firm from the get go but WSB can be a bit soft. You can keep the meet fresh longer too by icing a whole fish. Say you catch it on Tuesday and dont want to eat it until Saturday. Just ice it until Saturday morning. It is important to keep the fish from sitting in water though. I leave the plug open on the cooler and use shaved ice. I ice yt for a day or two tops. WSB and Halibut get two to three days before getting the knife. I gill and gut on the water and will now be slicing the tail to help the bleeding as that really seems to make sense. As far as sashimi goes I do not know if you are keeping yourself from getting sick or not when it comes to icing the fish first. We have eaten tuna so fresh it was still twitching and warm when we ate it. None of us ever got sick. Icing to me is merely a way to improve the quality of my fillets while extending the time I have to deal with a catch. Thanks for the info Yani |
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#7 | |
.......
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,509
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Quote:
Essentially what your doing is ageing your fish by letting it sit on ice. People do this with meat all the time, aged beef is the norm, and is considered to be more tender with better flavor then fresh. Same with fish, though you certainly do not want to age it as long. As to getting sick from what you eat... Well this is a topic kind of near and dear to me at this moment since I have been laid up for over a month due to complications (a intestinal bacterial infection) that resulted from what I'm pretty sure was food poisoning. I once got this sick before and that was actually from eating raw fish (Yellowtail) right out of the water, down at Ensanada but I believe that was due to the water we rinsed the fish off with, not the fish itself. That time my guts were screwed up for months, but in my recent case I'm pretty sure what got me was some undercooked Pork. The parasites in fish will not give you immediate food poisoning, but at times in their life cycle they are too small to see, and they can invade your gut and cause major complications down the line. If you going to eat raw fish right out of the water it's wise to eat it with ginger, wasabi, or cayenne pepper. Wasabi increases stomach acidity which kills parasites and it has other anti parasitic chemical properties. I've forgotten the actual chemicals involved maybe I look it up later. Cayenne once again increases acidity in the stomach but it also contains Capsicum which kills parasites, both roundworms and tapeworms, and also has anti bacterial qualities. Ever wonder why rural Mexicans do not get sick from their water? It's due to the high amounts of Capsicum in their diets. Ginger contains zingibain a anti parasitic chemical that kills parasites and inhibits parasite reproduction. Ginger extract has been scientifically shown to kill the anisakid nematode (worm) that infests the guts of local seals as well the tissue in our local fish. I see these worms in local halibut all the time.... ![]() .......but I've seen them in Yellows and Dorado as well and the younger worms are too small to see. That's the roundworm that we are most likely to get from eating local sushi or sashimi. No wonder the Japanese serve sushi with pickled Ginger... it works!! Of the three I like pickled ginger the best, but a teaspoon Tapitio, or even a Jalapeno or two after the fish is more then enough to kill anything you got with it, and prevent a parasitic infection. Right now due to my illness I'm taking a teaspoon of cayenne with warm water every morning for it's anti bacterial qualities, so no parasites for me, and it definitely wakes you up... ![]() As to all Yani said about Omega three fatty acids etc.... He's definitely right on the money. Jim Last edited by Fiskadoro; 12-29-2009 at 11:10 AM. |
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#8 |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Encinitas
Posts: 600
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great post, full of gems!
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#9 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: SD
Posts: 133
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Quote:
Capsicum has been a big part of my diet since I was a wee lad. I build a resistance to its effects and find Habanero's to be the most satisfying pods of them all. They are the most aromatic and have a smoky tropical fruit taste. Fresh is best but I also buy dried ones, remove the husk, stem, seeds and use a coffee grinder to make a fine powder. If you need to tone it down a bit, mix in lemon zest and garlic power. I sprinkle this on anything from orange sherbet, fresh mango, chicken, beef, fish etc... Capsicum intensify s flavoring buy making your taste buds more sensitive. Just try drinking a hot beverage after eating a raw habanero. Warning! Capsicum is the active ingredient in tear gas, and arthritis ointments. If you handle habanero with bare hands, it will soak into your fingers, then through your eye lids if you rub your eyes. (even days after) Lemon juice dilutes the burn if you get it in your eyes! ![]() |
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#10 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Rancho Cucamonga
Posts: 753
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No More Viagra
You mean to tell me I don't need a viagra prescription anymore, I just need to catch more YT? Damn, I get to kill two birds with one stone - what a great excuse to tell mama!
On a serious note - thank you for your knowledge and insight into the prep of YT. Now, I just need to catch one!
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GO ARMY BEAT NAVY! Bad decisions make great stories! ![]() |
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#11 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: La Jolla
Posts: 189
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Great Post!
Tom's right, this post is a revisit for sure. As far as the sashimi parasite thing I'll drop my $.02. We're not talking about bacteira here, but little wormy guys. Any bacteria would come from poorly handled meat, or a poorly cleaned fish. The parasites that would be in there, if they were, are visible. I'm not saying they're like dancing around like little taliban on the fish meat, but if you look good and hard you'll see them, if they are there at all, and it's really unlikely any are there. Freezing the fish, or icing it for 24 hours will kill 'em if they are there, if you're really worried about it. The fatty oily meat (belly, collar) is the best, and quite 'pure' looking and easy to once over if you're worried about it. My wife (an unbelievable cook from Japan), swears the fresher the better. The proof for me is in her puddin. Good luck all, Bon appitite. Willy |
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