PERRY, NY???Local resident Gary Ingram, 28, spent more than a quarter of an hour transforming a wet, grayish pile of canned tuna fish into something he would actually put in his mouth, sources said Monday. "Gotta have some pickles in there," Ingram said after draining the flaccid, oil-soaked fish and adding mayonnaise, red onions, and various other condiments to help mask its actual flavor. "And you can't have a tuna sandwich without some chopped celery and a couple of shots from the ol' Tabasco bottle." Ingram reportedly would have needed an additional 55 minutes of preparation time to make the tuna fish into something he would feel comfortable serving to a group of friends
PERRY, NY???Local resident Gary Ingram, 28, spent more than a quarter of an hour transforming a wet, grayish pile of canned tuna fish into something he would actually put in his mouth, sources said Monday. "Gotta have some pickles in there," Ingram said after draining the flaccid, oil-soaked fish and adding mayonnaise, red onions, and various other condiments to help mask its actual flavor. "And you can't have a tuna sandwich without some chopped celery and a couple of shots from the ol' Tabasco bottle." Ingram reportedly would have needed an additional 55 minutes of preparation time to make the tuna fish into something he would feel comfortable serving to a group of friends
Monkfish or Sea Devil when translated directly from german. It looks ugly but is one of the most delicious. Very firm, white flesh that doesn't falls into pieces when you cook it (for a soup e.g.). Plus it not as greasy as Halibut or Salmon.
Mmmm... my friend caught some Mako Shark last week. I marinated some in olive oil, lemon, pepper, white wine, and garlic. The other half I marinated in Jerk sauce I brought back from JA. Then BBQ'd it. It was some of the best fish I've ever had.
Comments
oh dear.
peace, stein. . .
tuna (raw)
salmon (smoked)
Twenty Minutes Spent Making Tuna Fish Palatable
PERRY, NY???Local resident Gary Ingram, 28, spent more than a quarter of an hour transforming a wet, grayish pile of canned tuna fish into something he would actually put in his mouth, sources said Monday. "Gotta have some pickles in there," Ingram said after draining the flaccid, oil-soaked fish and adding mayonnaise, red onions, and various other condiments to help mask its actual flavor. "And you can't have a tuna sandwich without some chopped celery and a couple of shots from the ol' Tabasco bottle." Ingram reportedly would have needed an additional 55 minutes of preparation time to make the tuna fish into something he would feel comfortable serving to a group of friends
http://www.theonion.com/content/news_briefs/twenty_minutes_spent_making
Toro doesn't take nearly that long, though.
gold.
- O in Ohio.
Rockling (stirfried)
Perch (steamed)
Flathead (deep fried)
but I could live off of salmon sashimi for the rest of my life...
Monkfish or Sea Devil when translated directly from german. It looks ugly but is one of the most delicious. Very firm, white flesh that doesn't falls into pieces when you cook it (for a soup e.g.). Plus it not as greasy as Halibut or Salmon.
I will not touch any ocean/water dwelling fishsticks. Shit is nasty!
I guess my favorite kind of fish is fresh.
pacarius
smoked salmon from my local shop
canadian organic salmon
tuna steaks
But really, it's redfish...
YES!
twenty seconds:
tuna
a scoop of rice
shoyu or kecap manis
fork
stir
Boom.
ahi pok??, for sure.
and also jamaican red snapper in brown stew or curry