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Started By
Message
Your fish frying techniques….
Posted on 5/10/25 at 2:12 pm
Posted on 5/10/25 at 2:12 pm
Go….
Posted on 5/10/25 at 2:18 pm to xBirdx
Hot oil, slap ya mama or blue bag la fish fry. I wet my fish normally with LA hot sauce unless it’s a really fresh and good saltwater fish like trout, snapper, grouper etc. then just fish and fry mix
Posted on 5/10/25 at 2:49 pm to xBirdx
Fish n’ Chips Style
Ingredients
• 1½ cups all-purpose flour
• ½ cup cornstarch
• ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper
• ¼ teaspoon paprika
• ¼ teaspoon ground black pepper
• 1½ tablespoons kosher salt
• 1 teaspoon baking powder
• 12 oz. beer
• 1 pounds 1-inch-thick cod fillet cut into approximately 3-ounce pieces.
Instructions
1. Whisk the flour, cornstarch, cayenne, paprika, pepper, and salt in a large mixing bowl.
2. Remove ¾ of a cup of the flour mixture and add it to a casserole dish and set this flour & dish aside.
3. Go back to the flour mixture that remains in the bowl and add baking powder. Whisk to combine.
4. Add ¾ cup beer to the flour mixture in mixing bowl and stir until mixture is just combined (batter will be lumpy). Add remaining beer as needed, a little at a time, whisking after each addition, until batter falls from whisk in thin, steady stream and leaves faint trail across surface of batter.
5. Dredge each piece of fish in the flour mixture shaking off excess flour. Dip 1 piece of fish in batter at a time and let excess run off, shaking gently. Place battered fish back into the dish with the flour mixture and turn to coat both sides.
6. Fry the fish at 375-385°F, stirring occasionally, until golden brown, about 5 minutes depending on thickness.
Ingredients
• 1½ cups all-purpose flour
• ½ cup cornstarch
• ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper
• ¼ teaspoon paprika
• ¼ teaspoon ground black pepper
• 1½ tablespoons kosher salt
• 1 teaspoon baking powder
• 12 oz. beer
• 1 pounds 1-inch-thick cod fillet cut into approximately 3-ounce pieces.
Instructions
1. Whisk the flour, cornstarch, cayenne, paprika, pepper, and salt in a large mixing bowl.
2. Remove ¾ of a cup of the flour mixture and add it to a casserole dish and set this flour & dish aside.
3. Go back to the flour mixture that remains in the bowl and add baking powder. Whisk to combine.
4. Add ¾ cup beer to the flour mixture in mixing bowl and stir until mixture is just combined (batter will be lumpy). Add remaining beer as needed, a little at a time, whisking after each addition, until batter falls from whisk in thin, steady stream and leaves faint trail across surface of batter.
5. Dredge each piece of fish in the flour mixture shaking off excess flour. Dip 1 piece of fish in batter at a time and let excess run off, shaking gently. Place battered fish back into the dish with the flour mixture and turn to coat both sides.
6. Fry the fish at 375-385°F, stirring occasionally, until golden brown, about 5 minutes depending on thickness.
This post was edited on 5/10/25 at 2:58 pm
Posted on 5/10/25 at 2:54 pm to HuntFishMan
For frying fish I think simple is sometimes the best method, I like Zatarain's fish fry just pat the fish dry with paper towels - bread them with a thin coat (shake a bit to get the loose powder off) and drop in hot oil.
Take them out and place them on a rack to cool and drip any excess oil off.
I add salt after frying and I like to cut some lemon wedges to add to the fish right before consuming.
Take them out and place them on a rack to cool and drip any excess oil off.
I add salt after frying and I like to cut some lemon wedges to add to the fish right before consuming.
Posted on 5/10/25 at 4:06 pm to xBirdx
Wet mix: Mustard, Louisiana Hot Sauce, just enough water.
Breading: Prefer “corn flour” over corn meal for most. Season the flour to your taste.
Fry over 350 or you’ll just absorb oil.
Breading: Prefer “corn flour” over corn meal for most. Season the flour to your taste.
Fry over 350 or you’ll just absorb oil.
Posted on 5/10/25 at 6:53 pm to xBirdx
Season fish and wait 15-30 minutes.
Dunk fish in ice cold water
Bread the fish - I like corn meal/corn flour breading like LA Blue Bag or similar.
Rest fish on rack after breading for a few minutes
Fry in hot oil till done
I used to dunk in buttermilk before breading, but I prefer the ice water bath now.
Dunk fish in ice cold water
Bread the fish - I like corn meal/corn flour breading like LA Blue Bag or similar.
Rest fish on rack after breading for a few minutes
Fry in hot oil till done
I used to dunk in buttermilk before breading, but I prefer the ice water bath now.
Posted on 5/10/25 at 7:03 pm to xBirdx
What kind of fried do you want?
Traditional corn ‘meal’ breading? Like catfish?
Hot oil, use a thermometer. Get it to 360-370 as it drops once you add food and you want it over 350*. Don’t add too much food so it stays hot.
Cut the fish thin, even snapper and grouper I cut long and thin.
Corn ‘flour’ is just corn meal ground more. You want a combination of mostly corn flour with some corn meal (usually 60/40 to 75/25 range).
I ‘bread’ all my food and fish ( zucchini is great like this, onion, etc) and put it on parchment paper ahead of time. You can layer it without much issue.
ETA: in regards to the best premade mix, you want the ones that have corn flour as the first ingredient. That means there’s more corn flour and not as much corn meal.
Traditional corn ‘meal’ breading? Like catfish?
Hot oil, use a thermometer. Get it to 360-370 as it drops once you add food and you want it over 350*. Don’t add too much food so it stays hot.
Cut the fish thin, even snapper and grouper I cut long and thin.
Corn ‘flour’ is just corn meal ground more. You want a combination of mostly corn flour with some corn meal (usually 60/40 to 75/25 range).
I ‘bread’ all my food and fish ( zucchini is great like this, onion, etc) and put it on parchment paper ahead of time. You can layer it without much issue.
ETA: in regards to the best premade mix, you want the ones that have corn flour as the first ingredient. That means there’s more corn flour and not as much corn meal.
This post was edited on 5/10/25 at 7:05 pm
Posted on 5/10/25 at 8:28 pm to xBirdx
Speckled trout I caught the night before or the morning of said frying?
Dashed of cayenne pepper and salt on the filets. Toss in container/bag of blue bag LA Fish Fry. Toss in hot grease.
If it’s filets I’ve had in the freezer, then I’ll put some mustard on them before executing the above process.
I must admit, though, I’m starting to like the flavor of the Crawcane fish fry more than the LA Products, but wish it had more cornmeal in it for fish.
Dashed of cayenne pepper and salt on the filets. Toss in container/bag of blue bag LA Fish Fry. Toss in hot grease.
If it’s filets I’ve had in the freezer, then I’ll put some mustard on them before executing the above process.
I must admit, though, I’m starting to like the flavor of the Crawcane fish fry more than the LA Products, but wish it had more cornmeal in it for fish.
This post was edited on 5/10/25 at 8:30 pm
Posted on 5/10/25 at 8:56 pm to ragincajun03
Jalepeno mustard and hot sauce for binder, cornmeal MIX (a mix of cornstarch, corn flour and cornmeal) with your favorite seasoning (I like yellow can LeBlancs) It’s how the guide service on our Toledo Bend crappie trips fried fish, and I think it’s as good as any of the many variations I’ve tried over the decades. Saltwater fish can take more hot sauce than crappie or catfish IMO.
Posted on 5/11/25 at 10:57 am to LSUfan20005
quote:This is the way.
Wet mix: Mustard, Louisiana Hot Sauce, just enough water. Breading: Prefer “corn flour” over corn meal for most. Season the flour to your taste. Fry over 350 or you’ll just absorb oil.
Another trick I do is mixing roughly 80% corn flour with 20% corn meal. Gives it a little more texture/bite.
Posted on 5/11/25 at 3:24 pm to xBirdx
So does your fish frying apparently.
Posted on 5/11/25 at 3:33 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
blue bag LA Fish Fry
This is what I use, but I normally cut it with unseasoned corn flour to cut down on the saltiness
Posted on 5/11/25 at 4:04 pm to xBirdx
Most times I cut the fish kind of thin on a bias. Then it goes in a beer and yellow mustard bath. Then I batter ..... lately I've been using Cajun Fry mild and hot. Great stuff!!! If not that then I like Zatarain's. I prefer to fry in fresh oil in the electric deep fryer outside. Peanut oil is best but I'm not against using canola or vegetable oil.
Great, now I want some fried fish. Maybe one night this week.
If you want you can add a lil baking powder to the fish fry batter(dry). This will make the batter puff up a little bit more.
Great, now I want some fried fish. Maybe one night this week.
If you want you can add a lil baking powder to the fish fry batter(dry). This will make the batter puff up a little bit more.
This post was edited on 5/11/25 at 4:08 pm
Posted on 5/11/25 at 4:06 pm to TigerBait2008
Hilarious.
Keep’em coming.
I’m sure everybody thinks you’re so funny.
Keep’em coming.
I’m sure everybody thinks you’re so funny.
Posted on 5/11/25 at 4:31 pm to xBirdx
I can no longer find the exact instructions online, but I originally got them from a box of a Zatarain's "Mardi Gras" fish "fri" that they apparently no longer make or market.
The binder is, as I recall, 1 cup of milk, 2 tablespoons creole mustard (spicy mustard), juice of half a lemon. Mix. Chill, it will start to slightly coagulate for a good thick coating.
Peanut oil to 360, dip in batter, shake off excess, cover in the zatarain's mix, into the oil until golden brown, about 5 minutes unless it's a huge hunk of fish.
Drain on wads of paper towels or better, a raised oven pan rack.
Perfect fried fish every time I've done it. It's a nice thick and crispy crust similar to good fried chicken.
The binder is, as I recall, 1 cup of milk, 2 tablespoons creole mustard (spicy mustard), juice of half a lemon. Mix. Chill, it will start to slightly coagulate for a good thick coating.
Peanut oil to 360, dip in batter, shake off excess, cover in the zatarain's mix, into the oil until golden brown, about 5 minutes unless it's a huge hunk of fish.
Drain on wads of paper towels or better, a raised oven pan rack.
Perfect fried fish every time I've done it. It's a nice thick and crispy crust similar to good fried chicken.
Posted on 5/11/25 at 7:48 pm to deeprig9
Posted on 5/11/25 at 9:06 pm to xBirdx
I have been using just egg white instead of a regular egg wash. I had read someplace the yolk can prevent the batter sticking. Seems to work. I don’t dust in flour before an egg wash because I don’t want that much batter on the fish. So I’ll do the egg white and a little hot sauce wash then into the batter.
Take the yolks and cure them in salt or add to a regular scrambled egg. Or make a hollandaise.
Take the yolks and cure them in salt or add to a regular scrambled egg. Or make a hollandaise.
Posted on 5/11/25 at 9:21 pm to NOLAGT
One of my children is lactose intolerant so I can’t use dairy. Season fish with kicked up Tony’s and then soak in beer in fridge for about an hour. Coat with Zatarains Crispy Cajun Fish Fri and fry at 350.
Posted on 5/11/25 at 9:42 pm to xBirdx
Couple scrambled eggs
A dash of the follow just to change the color
Hot sauce
Milk
Mustard
Dredge in corn meal (seasoned with your preferred seasoning mix) fry at 350°.
This is how we do it when we load the boat with walleye. It’s always a crowd pleaser paired with hand cut fries.
A dash of the follow just to change the color
Hot sauce
Milk
Mustard
Dredge in corn meal (seasoned with your preferred seasoning mix) fry at 350°.
This is how we do it when we load the boat with walleye. It’s always a crowd pleaser paired with hand cut fries.
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