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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: San Diego
Posts: 901
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You guys just cost me 175 bucks, thanks ........ lol
Ten dollars on ice and 165 bucks for a vacuum sealer and extra bags ..... Do you know how fast ice melts in Lakeside when it's 100 degrees .... I finally gave up and brought the fish (on ice) into the man cave with Air Conditioning ..... |
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#2 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Spring Valley
Posts: 1,400
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Quote:
![]() The vacuum sealer is one of the best fishing expenses you'll ever do. The ice is nice, just to be safe for when needed. Water in 2-litre bottles, then frozen, will save you from buying ice that often.
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"Never say die" |
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#3 | |
Team Keine Zugehörigkeit
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Way out there
Posts: 2,854
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Quote:
looks like you saved some money to me! ![]() http://www.giovannisfishmarket.com/f...te-FILLET.aspx
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Não alimente os trolls------------Don't feed the trolls---------------インタネット荒らしを無視しろ ![]() |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Fullerton
Posts: 1,361
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Before I had a vac sealer I used ziplocs and a big bowl of water. Zip most of teh way, submerge most of teh way with the zipper part out of the water and manipulate the fish until mosy of the bubbles are out.
I have also had success by wrapping tightly in plastic wrap and then putting in a ziplock, excluding as much air as possible. That said, I still prefer the vac sealer. |
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#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: San Diego
Posts: 901
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Well here it goes ....... ready to insert the knife ....
I like to cook and my small family doesn't like big portions so I will make a few different smaller portions ..... Grilled WSB for lunch ( maybe with the orange sauce) The scraps and head will be for fish soup tonight Will start the cevich cooking process with lime and add the salsa light tonight / early am Tomorrows night dinner will be fish sandwich or fish tacos, whatever the daughter decides .... I can't wait to taste all 4 And the rest goes in the freezer .... |
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: All over the country
Posts: 109
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Great topic on discussion!!
It looks like I'm doing it all wrong after reading this post.
I've been ocean fishing for about a month and saltwater fish food prep is new to me. I've kept 2 yellowtails for the dinner table in the last few weeks. Everything is already eaten and it tasted great. Please correct me if I'm prepping wrong. I would like to get the best tasting fish possible. It looks I have to add more money to the money pit to eat ocean fish. Here is what I do(same process used with freshwater fishing): 1. Catch and bleed out on the kayak 2. Typically and catch more for 1 to 4 hours 3. Take fish home in a plastic garbage bag (10 minutes from LJ) 4. Immediately fillet and cut into steaks 5. Rinse steaks with freshwater 6. Set aside 5 or 6 steaks to eat that day or over the next 2 days. 6.1 I place these steaks in a ziplock in a bowl surrounded by ice 7. Freeze the rest in freezer zip locks filled with freshwater 8. Eat all frozen fish within a month Is icing absolutely nescessary if you live close to the ocean? Last edited by icelogger; 08-29-2012 at 11:20 AM. |
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: San Pedro
Posts: 999
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I have a nice vacuum pack machine, but I almost always use the method that yakrider turned me onto a few years ago:
The original bags are hard find now but I can use my electric pump with an adapter and then use the Ziploc bags which are easy to find any where Here is a video showing the Reynolds pump / adapter and the Ziploc bags: http://www.reynloc.com/ Works freaking great The electric pump is from the Reynolds system The bags are from the Ziploc system The Ziploc pump is a hand pump that also works well, but the electric pump is faster and easier I made my own adapter.
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#8 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Spring Valley
Posts: 1,400
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Quote:
But, we've had seasons where we caught 4 WSB in one day, totally about 175 lbs of whole fish. Same season, 3 weeks apart, we each caught her 1st Thresher and my 1st Thresher, 85 lbs and 80 lbs respectively. None of those fish would even fit into the cooler, so we stacked them together into the back of the truck with 8 frozen 2-litre bottles around them, wet towels below and on top of the pile, which are shaded by the kayaks directly above (not on) them. We also took the care of keeping an old bath towel on them, keeping the towel wet the whole time we were still OTW. We always bring large towels for this purpose. We live a half hour away from the launch, not 10 minutes. For the care we take, we still have well over half of those fish left, from 2 years ago, and everytime we pull some out it taste like fresh fish. We also have Bluefin, Yellowtail, Halibut, Clams and Lobster in large supply. We eat a lot of fish, clams, crabs, and lobster, but seems we can never catch up, it's a good thing. We've done the ziploc method, works okay, for short durations, but for usually less than a year, at best, IMHO. All the fish we've kept, Thresher, WSB, Halibut, and even Yellowtail, all go for over $7 a pound, so we take the best care possible. The bounty of La Jolla is far too valuable in many ways, and we certainly don't want to waste anything we keep.
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