Not having the skin on shouldn't affect the *cooking*, per se, so....you can certainly still put a boneless/skinless fillet on a cedar plank and cook it up that way. But be warned that the cedar flavoring is powerful, so all of that flavor is going to seep into the fish. It's not BAD...it's just going to be different. Since you don't eat the skin on a salmon or a trout (least *I* don't) the skin will help to mellow the cedar flavor imparted to the flesh of the fish.
The other reason it works so well with salmon and trout is because they're an oily-er fish, and the flesh will come off the skin nicely. And....if the skin *does* stick to the cedar (from not enough oil or something), no big deal. Just the skin is stuck.
I can't vouch for crappie on cedar planks, either with or without the skin, as I haven't tried it. Just that crappie, being so mild already, is going to really take on that cedar flavor. Which is why I almost exclusively use it on salmon and trout.


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Nice catch!!! Love fish but don't like trout or spoonbill
















