I have a renewed admiration...

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theclaud

Openly Marxist
Location
Swansea
... for the knife-skills of Japanese chefs.

Got my hands on some mackerel and scallops so zingingly fresh that I just had to try my hand at sashimi for lunch today. Well - it tasted great, but it looked like a car crash, or at least the mackerel did (scallops are less challenging). Any dab hands on here that can give me a few tips on tackling the teleosts?
 

ttcycle

Cycling Excusiast
what knives have you got tc?
 
With mackerel, the sky's the limit! (For me, anyway :smile:)

Here's a salmon - it's a rose by any other name...:smile:
250px-Salmon_sashimi.jpg


Did you spike the brain of the fish immediately it was caught Claudine, or did you chat it up in the bar and spike its drink instead?

I used to have a set of Global knives once upon a time.

Sorry, can't help you. :ohmy::sad:
 

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ttcycle

Cycling Excusiast
Teef!!

Most important is a super sharp knife - I have a fish knife from Analon - what you'll find is that with japanese cooking a lot of the equipment is high end expensive stuff which enables people to produce the results, as well as years of training. A good quality sharp fish knife and a grinding stone to sharpen it will be worthy investments.

With the mackerel - fillet the mackerel - no easy way to describe this in words - best to show you but you're not often down these parts apart from the FNRttC. I'll try my best to describe it but another question first - did the fish need gutting or did they come pre-prepared?
 
OP
OP
theclaud

theclaud

Openly Marxist
Location
Swansea
ttcycle said:
what knives have you got tc?

Nothing specialist - just a nice set of German things. They are sharp though. Do I need one of those things that looks like a thin cleaver?
 
ttcycle said:
Teef!!

Most important is a super sharp knife - I have a fish knife from Analon - what you'll find is that with japanese cooking a lot of the equipment is high end expensive stuff which enables people to produce the results, as well as years of training. A good quality sharp fish knife and a grinding stone to sharpen it will be worthy investments.

With the mackerel - fillet the mackerel - no easy way to describe this in words - best to show you but you're not often down these parts apart from the FNRttC. I'll try my best to describe it but another question first - did the fish need gutting or did they come pre-prepared?


I suspect that's the answer for theclaud, simples, training.
 
OP
OP
theclaud

theclaud

Openly Marxist
Location
Swansea
ttcycle said:
With the mackerel - fillet the mackerel - no easy way to describe this in words - best to show you but you're not often down these parts apart from the FNRttC. I'll try my best to describe it but another question first - did the fish need gutting or did they come pre-prepared?

I had the fishmonger fillet the mackerel. I can do it, but he is neater so I thought that would be a headstart. Should I pin-bone the fillets? I wanted to cut diagonally across the grain, but that would have left pin-bones in the slices. And I was worried that if I tweezered them out it would mess up the fillets. I'd be up for a Masterclass though!
 
OP
OP
theclaud

theclaud

Openly Marxist
Location
Swansea
Crackle said:
I suspect that's the answer for theclaud, simples, training.

Of course, but my ambitions are fairly modest - I'm not aiming to win competitions, but just to get Slices That Look Good. A little bit of technique can go a long way.
 

ttcycle

Cycling Excusiast
The sets usually don't include a decent filletting knife - not a mini cleaver -that's good for other tasks - you'd need something that is flat and flexible in the blade and fairly small.

I could show you how to fillet and gut a fish- great skills to have - no guarantee that I would be as neat as a fishmonger though - sometimes it's great but sometimes not as neat!

Tweezers are the way to go at home, you can usualyl feel for small bones in the flesh. It would depend on the fish and texture whether you cut across the grain, but it's usually on the grain rather than counter the grain.
 
OP
OP
theclaud

theclaud

Openly Marxist
Location
Swansea
ttcycle said:
The sets usually don't include a decent filletting knife - not a mini cleaver -that's good for other tasks - you'd need something that is flat and flexible in the blade and fairly small.

I could show you how to fillet and gut a fish- great skills to have - no guarantee that I would be as neat as a fishmonger though - sometimes it's great but sometimes not as neat!

Tweezers are the way to go at home, you can usualyl feel for small bones in the flesh. It would depend on the fish and texture whether you cut across the grain, but it's usually on the grain rather than counter the grain.

I'm fairly happy with gutting and filleting for things other than sashimi, but then I usually make the sort of food where one has a bit more leeway in the quality of the knifework. Skinning flat fish I find rather tricky. On the grain, you say? Jolly good. I must look at some illustrations...
 

ttcycle

Cycling Excusiast
It would depend on the type of fish whether it was grain on/off - there's a whole art to sashimi presentation.

What went wrong with the mackerel?

Could be pressure applied to knife cause that can crush the flesh
 
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