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Fall fishin |
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no fishing pressure here |
One of my favorite fish to cook and eat is yellow perch. In my April 28 post, I compared frying and baking them.
http://markcrowther.blogspot.com/2014/04/yellow-perch-fried-vs-baked.html
I caught some perch at Lake Sadawga, filleted them, and cut them into small pieces. Typically with the fillets I make a beer batter and fish fry, but today I didnt have any beer in the house. Since my wife, Susan Crowther, is an excellent cook, I asked her to cook them for lunch instead.
She dredged the fish in white flour, fried them in grapeseed oil, and took them off the heat while she made a simple sauce called Meuniere of browned butter, lemon juice, parsley, salt and pepper.
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Meuniere sauce |
Meuniere is both the preparation and the sauce. Here is a step-by-step recipe for Fish a la Meuniere. Evidently, it was one of the first things she learned at the Culinary Institute of America. Lucky me!
After making the sauce, she re-added the fish to fry them in the sauce.
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almost done |
Compared to my beer batter fried perch, these perch were equally delicious but much lighter. Cooked in the lemon and butter sauce, they maintained their delicate flavor.
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cabbage, sauerkraut, quinoa with hot red peppers and perch a la Meuniere |
So, maybe running out of beer has its advantages? Post comments below.
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