What did it taste like chicken?...
I am gonna have to find out how to skin em. I catch so many skates I could fill the freezer. Surf n turf, venison and skate....hmmm.
Quote from: Whiskers on June 08, 2008, 05:04:39 PMI am gonna have to find out how to skin em. I catch so many skates I could fill the freezer. Surf n turf, venison and skate....hmmm. You need to knock em out and wing them right away. Get the wings on Ice. I take them home and hose them down right away, cause they slime up reel good as they sit. Skinning them is pretty easy once you get started. I usually use some STRONG kitchen shears and cut they outside edge off up to where the meat is about a half inch thick. This gets rid of those nasty little spikes for the most part. The skin is tough, but once you get it started enough that you can get a hold of the skin with your non-knife holding hand, it is easy to take the skin off of that beautiful white meat. A couple of tips-1. Use a VERY SHARP fillet knife2. Don't overcook them unless you like seafood flavored chewing gum.Google recipes using "Skate wing recipes" as your search words and you will be suprised as to how many recipes you will find. I have been playing with them using everything from Old Bay and Cayenne to Roasted Garlic Butter to BBQ sauce. the recipes you fing on google will help you with cooking time depending on how you choose to go with it. (grill, pan fry, etc.) Let me know if you decide to give it a try, it is truly delicious!!!
Quote from: seanr8w on June 08, 2008, 05:36:22 PMQuote from: Whiskers on June 08, 2008, 05:04:39 PMI am gonna have to find out how to skin em. I catch so many skates I could fill the freezer. Surf n turf, venison and skate....hmmm. You need to knock em out and wing them right away. Get the wings on Ice. I take them home and hose them down right away, cause they slime up reel good as they sit. Skinning them is pretty easy once you get started. I usually use some STRONG kitchen shears and cut they outside edge off up to where the meat is about a half inch thick. This gets rid of those nasty little spikes for the most part. The skin is tough, but once you get it started enough that you can get a hold of the skin with your non-knife holding hand, it is easy to take the skin off of that beautiful white meat. A couple of tips-1. Use a VERY SHARP fillet knife2. Don't overcook them unless you like seafood flavored chewing gum.Google recipes using "Skate wing recipes" as your search words and you will be suprised as to how many recipes you will find. I have been playing with them using everything from Old Bay and Cayenne to Roasted Garlic Butter to BBQ sauce. the recipes you fing on google will help you with cooking time depending on how you choose to go with it. (grill, pan fry, etc.) Let me know if you decide to give it a try, it is truly delicious!!! sounds like alot of work... it is worth it? i definitly do want to try it one day ...
Team Basket Case fished the JCAA Fluke Tournament yesterday. We got an early start at 5 AM. We must have caught 65 to 70 fluke with only 7 keepers in 11 hours. Our biggest was 4.81 lbs that was good enough for 7th in the Great Bay port. No one place place was better then the 20 spots we tried. They all produced fish. If the limit was 17 inches we would have limited out by noon time.
Our biggest was 4.81 lbs that was good enough for 7th in the Great Bay port.
Congratulations guys, I will be standing in the audience watching you collect your prize. We caught one keeper, 20+ shorts, and probably place about 15th a Great Bay. Our biggest downfall was the Brigantine run, we left fish, to find fish. Not a good idea.
Quote from: Great Bay Junky on June 15, 2008, 11:25:07 AM Our biggest was 4.81 lbs that was good enough for 7th in the Great Bay port. Nice job GBJ. I placed 7th in my port. We will be standing on the side stage together to collect our custom made rod. I will be sure to say hi.
Know Before You GoLocal Weather | Marine Bouy Weather | Inshore Forecast | Offshore Forecast | Interactive Wind Charts | Tide Charts | Sea Surface Temps | Chlorophyll Concentrates | Online Chart Viewer