Fishing with Rod Discussion Forum

Fishing in British Columbia => The Fish Kitchen => Topic started by: Guppy on February 05, 2006, 08:17:03 PM

Title: any body have any good recipes for tilapia
Post by: Guppy on February 05, 2006, 08:17:03 PM
just wonder what some good recipes for tilapia
Title: Re: any body have any good recipes for tilapia
Post by: shrek on February 06, 2006, 07:46:47 PM
they work great in the garden as fertilizer.
Title: Re: any body have any good recipes for tilapia
Post by: Fish Assassin on February 06, 2006, 09:08:00 PM
On Iron Chef America over the weekend they had tilapia as the secret ingredient. Some of the dishes created were awesome looking.
Title: Re: any body have any good recipes for tilapia
Post by: BwiBwi on February 07, 2006, 12:21:19 AM
1 Talapia

(1)
1tbs hot black bean sauce
1tbs chopped green onion
1tbs chopped ginger
1tbs chopped garlic
(2)
1tbs sake (Japanese wine)
1tbs soy sauce
1tbs sugar
half cup water
1tbs vinegar

First pan fried the fish (remember to de-scale) to golden brown colour. remove put on plate.
Then stir fried material from (1) for 10 sec then add items from (2) stir well let it simmer for 2min. then pour the sauce onto fish.

Done enjoy.
Title: Re: any body have any good recipes for tilapia
Post by: No_way on February 09, 2006, 09:27:15 AM
Here is one I posted in another thread earlier:

This is a classical Chinese technique I've picked up.  It is now my default way to cook fish.   

This is an all purpose recipe for any small whole fish.  WORKS GREAT!  The size of the fish is limited by the size of your steamer.  Fantastic for trout, perch, carp, tilapia, anything.

1.  Clean the fish and scale if it has large scales
2.  Cut a number of shallow, diagonal slits along both sides of the fish.  If it fits in the steamer be sure to leave the head on; the cheeks are the very best part.
3.  Lay some long pieces of green onion on a plate to stop the fish from sticking (the plate must fit in the steamer)
4.  Set the fish on the onion and sprinkle with shredded ginger.  The ginger helps to kill off any "fishy" or "muddy" tastes, making this great for carp.
5.  season the fish how you want (I use some soy sauce, sea salt, black pepper, and shredded red chillies)
6.  Let the fish sit while getting the steamer hot (a bamboo steamer over a wok of simmering water works best, but what ever works, right?).  Place the fish in the steamer and cook until the dorsal fin pulls out easily.   

7.  (optional) heat some vegetable and seasame oil in a pan, transfer the fish to a platter and slowly pour the hot oil over the fish.  It adds some flavor and gives the skin a crispy texture with a nice appearance.

Eat with rice.

You've never had moister fish in your life!  The fish can be separated from the skin and the bone using a pair of spoons VERY easily.   

Let me know what you think.  It's a nice change from the frying pan.
Title: Re: any body have any good recipes for tilapia
Post by: Guppy on February 19, 2006, 06:38:38 PM
Here is one I posted in another thread earlier:
 nice thanks
This is a classical Chinese technique I've picked up.  It is now my default way to cook fish.   

This is an all purpose recipe for any small whole fish.  WORKS GREAT!  The size of the fish is limited by the size of your steamer.  Fantastic for trout, perch, carp, tilapia, anything.

1.  Clean the fish and scale if it has large scales
2.  Cut a number of shallow, diagonal slits along both sides of the fish.  If it fits in the steamer be sure to leave the head on; the cheeks are the very best part.
3.  Lay some long pieces of green onion on a plate to stop the fish from sticking (the plate must fit in the steamer)
4.  Set the fish on the onion and sprinkle with shredded ginger.  The ginger helps to kill off any "fishy" or "muddy" tastes, making this great for carp.
5.  season the fish how you want (I use some soy sauce, sea salt, black pepper, and shredded red chillies)
6.  Let the fish sit while getting the steamer hot (a bamboo steamer over a wok of simmering water works best, but what ever works, right?).  Place the fish in the steamer and cook until the dorsal fin pulls out easily.   

7.  (optional) heat some vegetable and seasame oil in a pan, transfer the fish to a platter and slowly pour the hot oil over the fish.  It adds some flavor and gives the skin a crispy texture with a nice appearance.

Eat with rice.

You've never had moister fish in your life!  The fish can be separated from the skin and the bone using a pair of spoons VERY easily.   

Let me know what you think.  It's a nice change from the frying pan.

Title: Re: any body have any good recipes for tilapia
Post by: TrophyHunter on March 15, 2006, 01:57:16 PM
1 Talapia

(1)
1tbs hot black bean sauce
1tbs chopped green onion
1tbs chopped ginger
1tbs chopped garlic
(2)
1tbs sake (Japanese wine)
1tbs soy sauce
1tbs sugar
half cup water
1tbs vinegar

First pan fried the fish (remember to de-scale) to golden brown colour. remove put on plate.
Then stir fried material from (1) for 10 sec then add items from (2) stir well let it simmer for 2min. then pour the sauce onto fish.

Done enjoy.

man with all those ingredients you cook use dirty socks instead of fish and it would still taste good lol