How To Fillet Fish - *P Cooking ClassRecipe - Title:
- How To Fillet Fish - *P Cooking Class
- Categories:
- Fish/sea
- Yield:
- 1 servings
Directions - ~
SOLE FOOD The into steaks for grilling, or leave it whole for baking or poaching. - But if confronted by a thin Dover sole when craving fish and chips, or a pudgy salmon when you want slivers of gravlax, it's good to know how to fillet the fish yourself.
- While both flatfish and roundfish can be filleted, they are approached differently.
- A flatfish is easy to spot; it looks as if it has been run over by some underworld tractor.
- Flatfish swim horizontally along the sea bottom, with both eyes facing upward.
- You can obtain four nearly equal fillets from a flatfish, one from either side of the backbone on both sides.
- To fillet a flatfish (sole, flounder, turbot, Pacific halibut): Peel it by laying it flat on a counter with the dark side up and the tail towards you.
- Slice off the tail, and insert the tip of a knife until you have a grip on the skin.
- Holding the tail in place, pull the skin back towards the head, over the head, and then down the light colored side.
- Lay the fish on the counter with its eyes facing up.
- Cut down the backbone along the center of the fish, then hold your knife at an angle at the head end of one fillet.
- Lift the fillet with one hand, while scraping gently with small strokes, using the bone structure to guide the knife.
- Cut away the second fillet from the first side.
- Turn the fish over and repeat the process.
- Roundfish, shaped like a tube, have a center backbone, separating two thick fillets.
- A line of bones extends upward from the spine, and a pair of bone creates an oval on the lower side of the fish, enclosing the entrails.
- You can create four fillets, but usually one is cut from each side.
- To fillet: Lay the fish on one side, with its tail towards you.
- Slice along the backbone from head to tail, exposing the backbone.
- Hold a knife parallel to the top ribs, cut down the length of the fillet, using short strokes to detach it completely.
- Turn fish around, hold it by the exposed backbone, and slice the other half of the fillet free.
- Flip the fish over, and fillet the other side.
- To skin fillets, lay them skin side down, and hold the tail end.
- Insert the knife at the shallow end and scrape along the skin to separate the it from the fillets.
- Run your fingers all along the top of the fillet and feel for pesky little bones.
- They can easily be removed with tweezers, a gesture that will be greatly appreciated by all who eat it.
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