Best way to eat mud fish

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    Posted: 31 Oct 2002 at 9:21pm
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I was given a mud fish the other day. Smoked it but thought it was a bit tasteless.

Whats the best way to eat a muddie

Bushie

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote smudge Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Nov 2002 at 1:31am
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It depends where they are caught as to how they taste, the pink fleshed ones are way tastier. Once you accept they are not the same taste as a sea fish you are halfway there. Straight on the barbie, skin and all (gutted!) - in butter of course - is not a bad way to cook the smaller ones. They cook up nice in a microwave. Something simple like a parsley butter sauce isnt too bad.

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote lollypop Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Nov 2002 at 10:20am
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hey bush, smudge is right, it all depends on where tfey are caught, at a spot where i used to fish the fish had a slight dirt flavor, needless to say i dont fish that spot much anymore, If u get a nice one, with bright orange flesh, fillet it then coat it in seasoned flour(flour, salt pepper) and fry it in lots of butter, yummmy!!!!!! bring on the mudfish. cya lolly
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Matt B Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 Nov 2002 at 12:34pm
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Split them in half from the bottom, leaving intact near line of dorsal fin and make a pizza on top of them.  So they are the pizza base.  Don't use things that are too strong a flavour and give a little heavy on the cheese.  Is good, but a think a pizza box would be good done like this too.

Alternatively, use them as bait and catch a decent tasting fish.

Matt B

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Fishb8 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 Nov 2002 at 12:48am
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Hi Bushie

Did you cold smoke it? They do have a delicate flavour but are really beautiful, especially a Taupo trout, straight from the lake, dripping with omega 3 oil!  Also raw, shashimi style. I never cook mine.

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Pole Dancer Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Aug 2003 at 5:50pm
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Just release them unharmed and eat sea fish... much nicer....
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Barrie Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Aug 2003 at 7:21am
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welcome Cicada
according to Fish and Game. A lot of the stocked lakes that are in the Auckland area, you should take them or distroy them as the reason they dont grow is either poor stock or lack of food. Was supprised at that. I suppose that natural breeding lakes and rivers are a different story.
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Pole Dancer Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Aug 2003 at 2:27am
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It's a fair point in some specific areas... but if the Fish and game are advocating killing fish in stocked lakes because of poor stock perhaps they need to really have a good hard look at that!

 

My point was really in relation to eating trout... I think they are horrible and usually only recieve approving comments after doused in every imaginable herb in the cupboard... and I've tried them a hundred different ways... now a nice piece of snapper is hard to stuff up!

 

Catch and release is, as with anything, a personal choice. It's also a management tool but  I do know iof rivers and streams that could use a good cull... but that's more to do with management that eating them.

 

 

 

 

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote BOMBAY BOB Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 Sep 2003 at 6:17pm
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theres nothing like smoked or bbqed trout tastes far better that sea fish done the same way

by sea fisher turned trout fisher

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Kylie Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 Sep 2003 at 7:39pm
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Lemon Pepper (Light), Cajun Seasoning (Light) , Green Herb Stock (Stock), Grated Cheese (Heavy).

Smoke it With Teetree Sawdust and it turns out Beeeeeeaaauuuutiiiifuuuulll!!!!

Cheers

Kylie

PS.  Pretty good on Most Light flavoured fish.

 

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Barrie Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Sep 2003 at 6:42am
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I paid $24 for some salmon steaks on Saturday...had walked past them several times and man..they looked great. Ive had salmon at resturants several times and want to go to the cold part of NZ to catch them one day but they have to be the most tasteless fish I have ever tasted. Fresh water fish just need lots of herbs and spices to get any taste. I know that salmon are sea raised but maybe its the fresh water that cleans out the taste or something? anyone had freash caught sea salmon?
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote lalandi Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Sep 2003 at 9:53am
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Yes... mmmmm... delish

OMG And you dont even smoke ciggies Barrie... Get a check up.

Trout... They are released for a good reason and that aint conservation...

Salmon... High up in my personal favourite eating fish...

So you're a feminist... How cute
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Bushpig Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Sep 2003 at 9:55am
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Bazza,

Smoked salmon has to be some of the best fish you can eat.

I would rather laugh with the Sinners, than cry with the Saints
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Mr Bean Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Sep 2003 at 11:21am
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oh love salmon right up there for me too.
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote KingfishSi Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 16 Sep 2003 at 11:25am
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Mmmmm, salmon... hard to beat!
Keep knockin', nobody's home.
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Hi Barrie,  I know what you mean when it comes to farmed salmon. I did my "apprenticeship" on the red & black rivers so can say I'v tasted a few straight from the sea. Free range salmon feed largely on krill & I think that has a lot to do with the taste. Farmed salmon eat what they are given & I suspect that would be fish meal & pig pellets. During the summer months salmon was almost a staple diet,we had it smoked,bottled,baked & poached(yeh,right!) but found it too rich for frying. Take my word for it, fresh salmon would be up there with the best, ask the Royal Family!

I tried the supermarket version once & it reminded me of Chinese whitebait!

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote KingMyles Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 25 Jan 2006 at 10:30pm
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I take it by 'mudfish' you are talking about freshwater trout/salmon not the threatened native mudfish?

I agree the searun trout and salmon and true saltwater fish taste better that their freshwater counterparts.

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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Vundu Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Feb 2006 at 1:24am
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Have you tried smoked Eel? Best thing that can ever happen to you.
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Tagit Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 19 Feb 2006 at 11:31am
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I never buy shop salmon, and won't order it in a restaurant due to bland flavour as Barrie mentioned. A few years ago however, a friend and I flew to Anchorage (Alaska), hired a float plane, flew 3 hours into a remote (I mean REMOTE) lake, dropped out the raft, and spent 7 days raft/fishing the Alagnac river before getting picked up by the float plane soemwhere down the river. A big adventure involving 6 moose, ~25 bears, and 9 species of freshwater fish (target was big King Salmon on fly rods). One of the more common species was Sockeye (Red) Salmon. Each day we would keep one of these and cook it for dinner (assuming mr bear didn't turn up). The way we cooked it was to head and tail the trunk, boil up the billy, put one end of the fish in our comparitively small billy (usually 5 - 7 kilo fish) for approx 5 mins, then turn the fish around and cook the other end. These fish were so tasty that even this 'robust' method of cooking could not ruin the flavour. Some of the best fish I have ever eaten anywhere. We also got some decent King Salmon up to 70lb, and one we kept to eat was also excellent. As someone mentioned above, wild filsh straight from the sea taste very different to farmed fish.
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Post Options Post Options   Likes (0) Likes(0)   Quote Vig Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 Mar 2006 at 6:41pm
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Yeah Nice Dave. Supposing we don't have the requisite cash to head to Alaska to catch our own, there are some alternatives to salmon.

I have had real awful trout and real fine trout and the secret is in where they are caught and how they are treated. As a sea fish we tend to have flaked ice etc on board and the fish get ikkied and chilled real quick. The flesh is firm and tasty. Unfortunately when we catch trout it is almost certain we dont have ice and chilling facilities close to hand. Who's going to lug that around a river or lakeshore, (boating excepted).

If I decide to keep a fish I do try to bury it under water until I leave the area, it will discolour but seems to retain some flavour, and then I get it home as quick as possible.

Recently lala and I brought a wee trout home from the lakes near coleridge and I kept it in the lake and as cold as possible for as long as possible, then straight ino the fridge on arrival home. Now the secret to that fish, which was one of the best I have ever tasted, was a commercial cold smoke, I asked the local butcher to smoke it with his bacon and he did a magnificent job.

Personally I find salmon too rich and overrated, not to mention bluddy pricey, and prefer the more subtle and delicate taste of trout. And if the flesh is orange enough, sashimi-ed with wasabi and soy sauce is definitely the way to go.

 

Vig

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