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Title: Fish Selection Guide
Categories: Fish Info
Yield: 1 Info file
Text |
Sometimes, you have a great fish recipe but you can't find the type of fish called for. Or maybe the fish that the recipe requires is really expensive, but another kind of fish is on sale at the market.
This guide, adapted from a chart in the Summer 1991 edition of Simply Seafood, groups fish by similarities in texture and flavor. You can take advantage of it by substituting other fish in the same categories.
Delicate texture, mild flavor: Flounder/Sole, Orange roughy, skate, sea trout/Weakfish, Alaska Pollock
Delicate texture, moderate flavor: Catfish, Whiting/Hake
Delicate texture, full flavor: Herring/Sardine, Smelt, Eel, Butterfish
Medium firm texture, mild flavor: Cod, Haddock, Halibut, Tilefish, Grouper, Snapper, Tilapia, Cusk, Ocean Pout, Wolffish
Medium firm texture, moderate flavor: Ocean Perch/Rockfish, Striped Bass, Walleye Pike, Turbot, Chum Salmon, Pink Salmon, Drums, Buffalofish, Rainbow Trout, Mahi-Mahi, Sea Bass, Mullet, Porgy/Scup, Atlantic Pollock, Pompano, Perch
Medium firm texture, full flavor: Atlantic Salmon, King Salmon, Mackeral, Amberjack, Sockeye Salmon, Sablefish, Bluefish, Carp, Pomfret, Yellowtail
Firm texture, mild flavor: Monkfish, Kingklip
Firm texture, moderate flavor: Shark, Sturgeon
Firm texture, full flavor: Tuna, Marlin, Swordfish
How much per person: Whole/round fish - 3/4 to 1 pound; Dressed/cleaned fish - 1/2 to 3/4 pound; Steaks/fillets - 1/3 to 1/2 pound; Cooked fish - 1/4 to 1/3 pound.
Cooking times for fish is generally the same: 8 to 12 minutes total per inch of thickness regardless of method (except microwave.) Most fish is "done" when the flesh is opaque and flakes easily, except for swordfish and monkfish which do not flake.
MM by Dave Sacerdote
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