I tried again a few years ago, and like before, i thought it was too fishy. those 10-12 in craps are so mild, they just spoil a person...I will have to try again.
Printable View
I tried again a few years ago, and like before, i thought it was too fishy. those 10-12 in craps are so mild, they just spoil a person...I will have to try again.
So to start with you take a Machete cut the last 1/3 off the blade, reshape and sharpen. When I Gar fished as a teenager we caught huge Gar on Lake Hermitage at the Camp of some New Orleans Firefighters. They had a pier at the mouth of the bayou feeding into the Lake. Well we would pull them up on the dock and after dying we would clean them by chopping from the rear dorsal fin forward to the head plate. Then you cut from the underside down from the head plate past the lower 1/3rd of the fish. Taking a long fillet knife you go down the backbone to the horizontal vertebra then out to the skin. Again starting at the top cut skin the tenderloin down to the horizontal cut to skin. Now the tenderloin can be cut out.
To cook, slice the tenderloin in 1/4 inch slices top to bottom. Don't worry about the leaders your looking at and cutting thru, continue to slice up till you have what you want to cook. Lay the slices out flat and first season with Tony's then flour with AP well pressing into the coating. Using black iron (I use a Dutch Oven due to splattering here) melt bacon grease and fry the slices brown, brown, brown, almost toasting the flour. The leaders tenderize in this process. Remove your cooked slices to drain on paper towels and keep warm in the oven. Now using the same pan leaving all the drippings inside, make a brown roux with butter & AP flour, Add thin sliced onions, pressed garlic, and dried Thyme leaves to the roux and cook till soft. Add chicken stock till a gravy is formed then season. If you season before adding the chicken stock it may be too salty. lastly cook some long grain rice. To plate - first is a layer of the rice, then a layer of the fried Gar, finishing with your gravy over the top. I also top mine with fresh parsley & diced boiled eggs. And yes, I have Web Feet from growing up in New Orleans.
I think you could cook an oak board and make it delicious
Too funny. I think we ate the Louisiana State record Alligator Gar. I didn't think of stuff like that back then. It was over 7ft long, two of us could not lift it. While skinning it, it was swimming under my blade on the pier. They keep moving long after dispatched. Creeps my wife out when I'm cleaning Alligators because the tail fillet will be moving on the cutting board in the kitchen while slicing it up fresh.
They are definitely survivors
gar eggs , not good , just saying , gar balls , really good , just saying .....:Rofl
gar eggs are known to be poisonous, of course no clue here ,but it seems like a bad idea from what I have heard and read