Is this a Walleye?

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They can be decent if taken from cold water. Scored and deep fried in cornmeal.
I think you nailed it.
Does scored mean removing the bloodline?
I haven't been brave enough to try eating one, but I'd rather give it a go versus alot of other marginal game some people eat.
 
I think you nailed it.
Does scored mean removing the bloodline?
I haven't been brave enough to try eating one, but I'd rather give it a go versus alot of other marginal game some people eat.
I mean cutting slices across the fish to open up more area to fry. Cooks faster and more evenly, more crispy bits, lets out more moisture so the skin gets crispier and not rubbery.
 
I think you nailed it.
Does scored mean removing the bloodline?
I haven't been brave enough to try eating one, but I'd rather give it a go versus alot of other marginal game some people eat.
Such as ?
 
Good god guys….I would have to be absolutely stomach eating starving to eat a carp.

And if I brought one into our kitchen my wife would stick me with the biggest knife she could get her hands on.
 
Some kind of sucker. Scale pattern and the oversized anal fin are the telltales here.

I think you nailed it.
Does scored mean removing the bloodline?
I haven't been brave enough to try eating one, but I'd rather give it a go versus alot of other marginal game some people eat.
More importantly, it lets the hot oil contact the bones and soften them to nothing. With suckers/buffalo/carp, they are scored every 1/8” or so down to the skin. Ends up looking like a bunch of potato chips stuck together.

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You have to leave the skin on. Scale the suckers, but you have to cut the scales off of Buffalo & carp (called fleecing). Bleeding buffalo & carp is not optional- most commercial fishermen don’t initially, but then they have to “drain” the fillets for multiple days before selling it. Easier to just rip a gill and move on.

I’ll cut the bloodline out of bigger fillets, or if it’s noticeable. The section over the ribs doesn’t have y-bones and can be fried like a normal fillet, skin-off.

Redhorse and hog suckers are the best, on par with most panfish- there’s entire seasons centered around gigging & snagging them in the Ozarks. I’d rather have redhorse than crappie most days (but that might be nostalgia speaking). Good buffalo can be a close second, but it’s more similar to catfish in texture. Carp needs to be out of cold, crystal clear water (some people keep them alive and purge them for several days with water changes). Even then, it’s not as good.

Side note- if you get a grass carp over 20lbs, you can grill the loins and just pick out the bones.
 

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Some kind of sucker. Scale pattern and the oversized anal fin are the telltales here.


More importantly, it lets the hot oil contact the bones and soften them to nothing. With suckers/buffalo/carp, they are scored every 1/8” or so down to the skin. Ends up looking like a bunch of potato chips stuck together.

View attachment 380337

View attachment 380338

View attachment 380352

You have to leave the skin on. Scale the suckers, but you have to cut the scales off of Buffalo & carp (called fleecing). Bleeding buffalo & carp is not optional- most commercial fishermen don’t initially, but then they have to “drain” the fillets for multiple days before selling it. Easier to just rip a gill and move on.

I’ll cut the bloodline out of bigger fillets, or if it’s noticeable. The section over the ribs doesn’t have y-bones and can be fried like a normal fillet, skin-off.

Redhorse and hog suckers are the best, on par with most panfish- there’s entire seasons centered around gigging & snagging them in the Ozarks. I’d rather have redhorse than crappie most days (but that might be nostalgia speaking). Good buffalo can be a close second, but it’s more similar to catfish in texture. Carp needs to be out of cold, crystal clear water (some people keep them alive and purge them for several days with water changes). Even then, it’s not as good.

Side note- if you get a grass carp over 20lbs, you can grill the loins and just pick out the bones.
Now who wouldn't take a bite of that?^
🙂
Good explanation of things @R.K.
My intuition is the meat from a cold temps fish would be bland, but not offensive. I have had trout that tasted like mud and wanted to make me puke.
 
Now who wouldn't take a bite of that?^
🙂
Good explanation of things @R.K.
My intuition is the meat from a cold temps fish would be bland, but not offensive. I have had trout that tasted like mud and wanted to make me puke.
Any fish tastes better out of cold water. I used to not eat crappie caught in the summer, but the “bleed and ice” regimen has changed things.
 
Fertilizer?
When I was in High School I lived with an older couple who's son was from the Seattle area. When the carp were spawning he would fork up a truck load and park in the lot of of a super market in an Asian neighborhood and and sell the carp for five buck each. Would sell out in a few hours.
 
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One of my favorite eating fish. Used to be a restaurant in Omaha that fried them. Now there’s a few smaller local establishments around that still offer fried carp. When prepared by the experts, it’s my favorite eating fish
 
I just can't agree with it being the best but it can be pretty good. Growing up in farming country there wasn't a lot of choices for fishing. Catfish, bullhead, MAYBE some bluegill if you had a pond nearby and carp. You had to learn how to cook it. You folks are spoiled by eating walleye and trout and salmon all the time! Give it a try sometime and you may be surprised! It's not as bad as you think.
 

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