Mike G wrote:
How are they? Anyone know?
Jay K wrote: First time I bought them, the fishmongers were willing to fillet after a little persuasion; second time no luck. So I had 'em gut 'em and snip the fins/tails on two large mackerel.
Jay K wrote:Mackerel's pretty popular on this board at the Japanese and Korean restaurants. I'm trying to eat more mackerel simply for the health benefits, although it's a fairly tasty fish grilled or pan-fried. H-Mart sells whole mackerels of different varieties. The regular Norwegian mackerel was on sale for $2.99/lb,
Ramon wrote:Jay K wrote: First time I bought them, the fishmongers were willing to fillet after a little persuasion; second time no luck. So I had 'em gut 'em and snip the fins/tails on two large mackerel.
Super H-Mart now smartly has a number system (one through seven) for how you want the fishmongers to deal with your pick. Point at a fish, say the number for say filet, and voila.
-ramon
Jay K wrote: Even better - see if they'll fillet some crucian for you
Ramon wrote:Jay K wrote: Even better - see if they'll fillet some crucian for you
I don't even know what a crucian is!
-ramon
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
Amusing price anomalies: soup bones for 99 cents a pound and fatty cross rib sections for 79 cents a pound. I bought both for making stock. My all time H-Mart favorite: oxtails for $5.99 a pound and beef filet for $4.99 a pound.
Regards,
Jay K wrote:They also have veal tails; I'd never seen 'em elsewhere.
Cathy2 wrote:New ingredient to muse about: Beef Marrow Guts at $1.99 a pound. This is the marrow extracted from the bone.
Rene G wrote:Cathy2 wrote:New ingredient to muse about: Beef Marrow Guts at $1.99 a pound. This is the marrow extracted from the bone.
Are you sure? Marrow gut usually refers to a part of an unweaned calf's stomach. It's an essential ingredient of sonofabitch stew. See Frank X Tolbert's A Bowl of Red for plenty of background on this Texas delicacy.
This last item, the "marrow gut", was a key ingredient. Davidson quotes Ramon Adam's 1952 Come An' Get It: The Story of the Old Cowboy Cook, which reports that this is a tube, between two of the calf's stomachs, filled with a substance resembling marrow, deemed edible only while the calf is young and still feeding on milk. This marrow-like substance was included in the stew and, according to Adams, was "what gave the stew such a delicious flavor." Davidson says this "marrow gut" probably was the passage leading to the abomasum as well as the abomasum itself (said to have a "distinctive flavour of rennin-curdled milk").
Mhays wrote:I had a similar issue with my monkfish the other day - the lady at the counter asked me if I wanted it cut up, and I said no; but could they skin it and bone it for me (fileted would have been fine had I read the signs in front of me.) It was returned sawed into chunks - bone, skin and all, making it less easy to remove the bone and skin at home.
FWIW, I was a bit tentative about the whole thing, so I'm not certain it wasn't somehow my error....
Gypsy Boy wrote:The monkfish was very disappointing--and very messy. Skin, bone, wings (or whatever those things are called)...yuck! I spent a long time at the cutting board and though the final product was worth it (made some bouillabaise), the effort was far more than I anticipated.
Of course, in skinning a big 'ol catfish, it helps to nail it's head down on an 'ol tree stump 'fore pulling off the skin.
Mhays wrote:I've seen the catfish-skinning; it seems like it would work for Monkfish if only they left the head...but then the thing would cost $50 because the head (which you discard) must weigh a ton.