by Dana Point Fish Company | Nov 28, 2014 | Cooking Methods, Methods and Terminology
Sauteing Fish Saute is a cooking method that has three main components: Hot pan, little oil. Avoid overcrowding. Keep the food moving. These three components are key, which makes it a very different cooking method from pan frying. Fish that is sauteed is typically...
by Dana Point Fish Company | Nov 26, 2014 | Angler's Kitchen, Prepping and Fabrication, Seafood
Mussels have all have ‘beards’ and need to be debearded before cooking and using in recipes. The ‘beards’ are the byssus of the mussels, which are filaments the mussels use to attach themselves to substrates and surfaces. The beards should...
by Dana Point Fish Company | Nov 20, 2014 | Cooking Methods, DPFishCo, Prepping and Fabrication, Recipes
Begin at the tail. Grasp the tail, and scrape your knife against the skin. At this moment, aggressive, acidic, liver bile burns, corrodes, and levitra free samples injures the intestinal walls. Lifestyle plays a vital role in boosting the immune system, increasing...
by Dana Point Fish Company | Nov 6, 2014 | Cooking Methods, DPFishCo, Flatfish, Prepping and Fabrication
How to Fillet a Flat Fish (Like a Halibut) Place the fish on a large, flat, clean surface with the dark side facing up (the top of the fish). Carefully make a clean cut around the head, then make one long incision straight down the length of the fish to cut the center...
by Renee Shelton | Sep 7, 2014 | DPFishCo, Fishing, Food Safety, Safety, Scorpionfish, Seafood
Marine Envenomation Marine envenomation is the resulting poisoning that comes from a sting from a venomous fish or sea animal, such as lionfish, jellyfish, sea urchins, and sting rays. These stings range in seriousness depending on the animal from very mild to lethal...
by Renee Shelton | Aug 16, 2014 | Fishing, Food Safety, Safety
What is Ciguatera and Ciguatoxin? Ciguatoxins are poisonous compounds naturally produced by dinoflagellates, Gambierdiscus toxicus, which are microscopic organisms. These organisms are eaten by reef fish from tropical and subtropical waters. Also, carnivorous tropical...