![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I want to pan fry trout, but would like to butterfly them to flatten them
out prior to frying. What would be the best approach to butterflying trout - cut down the center of the backbone?? Or is there a better approach to accomplishing this? Thanks Charlie ************************************************** **** Charliec |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Charliec" wrote in message ... I want to pan fry trout, but would like to butterfly them to flatten them out prior to frying. What would be the best approach to butterflying trout - cut down the center of the backbone?? Or is there a better approach to accomplishing this? Thanks Charlie ************************************************** **** Charliec Why not just filet them like a walleye etc, cut out the back bone and the ribs. I do it with the larger trout 13"+ and it works fine to fry. Anything smaller than that its cooks pretty easily gutted and left whole(I cut the head off). Butter and garlic is my favorite followed by butter and Mrs Dash. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks Fleaman,
I'll give it a go. Charlie "Fleaman" wrote: "Charliec" wrote in message .. . I want to pan fry trout, but would like to butterfly them to flatten them out prior to frying. What would be the best approach to butterflying trout - cut down the center of the backbone?? Or is there a better approach to accomplishing this? Thanks Charlie ************************************************** **** Charliec Why not just filet them like a walleye etc, cut out the back bone and the ribs. I do it with the larger trout 13"+ and it works fine to fry. Anything smaller than that its cooks pretty easily gutted and left whole(I cut the head off). Butter and garlic is my favorite followed by butter and Mrs Dash. ************************************************** **** Charliec |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We butterfly them down the backbone , but only if they are going into the
smoker. just to pan fry we leave them whole ( minus the head and guts of course.) "Charliec" wrote in message ... I want to pan fry trout, but would like to butterfly them to flatten them out prior to frying. What would be the best approach to butterflying trout - cut down the center of the backbone?? Or is there a better approach to accomplishing this? Thanks Charlie ************************************************** **** Charliec |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I love most salwater fish but I've never been a fan of freshwater fish.
Last summer I carried sal****er Texas caught speckled trout to a family lakeside get-together in W.Va. for a fish fry, mainly so that I would not have to eat fresh water fish. Several large fresh water trout had been caught that morning in the cold water below the dam and they were big enough to make 8" to 12" fillets and they deep fried great. The flesh of this trout was almost yellow in color and the meat was flakey and delicious after cooking. I'd eaten stocked trout years before and it was awful. I still don't like most freshwater fish (including farm raised catfish) but that did change my mind about "native" trout. Crappy is OK and we catch a little fish that they call a "rock bass" in a cold stream around a family camp near Moorefield, W.Va. that is reasonable. I fillet almost everything that is big enough to make a decent piece of fish unless I'm going to bake or BBQ/smoke it. I put four nice (16-18") specks on ice tonight and will have them with sauteed shrimp for lunch tomorrow. I love living on the bayou!!! Quinton (oYo)" wrote in message news:e8Oqc.537154$Ig.46641@pd7tw2no... We butterfly them down the backbone , but only if they are going into the smoker. just to pan fry we leave them whole ( minus the head and guts of course.) "Charliec" wrote in message ... I want to pan fry trout, but would like to butterfly them to flatten them out prior to frying. What would be the best approach to butterflying trout - cut down the center of the backbone?? Or is there a better approach to accomplishing this? Thanks Charlie ************************************************** **** Charliec |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Meeting report: 19th Century North America trout propagation | William Claspy | Fly Fishing | 0 | April 22nd, 2004 02:37 PM |
Gorillas, Trout Fishing, Upper Delaware River | Vito Dolce LaPesca | Fly Fishing | 0 | March 1st, 2004 02:07 PM |
Trout fishing with worms | mary | Fly Fishing | 33 | January 24th, 2004 06:52 PM |
record rainbow trout | lucy white | Fly Fishing | 9 | December 4th, 2003 08:11 AM |
Point Lookout 11/3 & 11/4 more trout | TidalFish.com | Fly Fishing | 0 | November 5th, 2003 08:13 PM |