@plasterdbastard - ther's actually very little meat loss, leaving the thin part of the belly intact actually lends itself to stuffing the fillet - basically the stuffing takes the place of the entrails.
@rylematou he left it in one piece..if it was simply filleting it you would start the same way but once you got back to the dorsal fin you would stick your knife straight out threw the gut from the dorsal fin side with the knife laid flat against the spine and in one quick motion slice the back half of the fillet off the spine...THEN go back and finish tracing over the ribs. same thing other side, no awkward last cuts removing it from the tail with plain filleting(and same amount of meat)
very informative, exactly what I was searching for. I agree the resolution quality isn't great but it is nothing more than a minor setback, the presentation is still clear and easy to follow. will be practicing this next week when I bring more trout home.
@DrStricklandmd read my post... quicker and easier and removes same amount of meat in two pieces...even then you should cut the fillets that size in half again before cooking or they will curl up on you in the pan
@jsmallwood2007 - If you start frying the fillet flesh side down first, it won't curl up. if you fry it skin side down the skin immediately shrinks and that's what causes the curling. Brown the flesh side first then flip it over and you're set. Of course you can stuff it, and smoke it also.
Drake brought me here.
Saskiequelle 2 weeks ago
Nice audio but did you film this with your calculator??
esh1 1 month ago
I have used this technique for years...I have hound it works for almost any species of fish with only very minor adjustments.
whatever438 9 months ago
I have used this technique for years...I have hound it works for almost any species of fish with only very minor adjustments.
whatever438 9 months ago
This is not the butterfly technique that I am familiar with.
I always use a similar technique that opens the fish on the ventral side, not the dorsal side.
The difference being that the back meat is thicker than the belly meat, and it is more easily lost when approaching through the dorsal side.
It appears in this method, that you've lost more meat than I typically would in my butterfly technique.
I'll have to make a video and reply.
This video was well done and informative, though. +1
plasterdbastard 1 year ago
@plasterdbastard - ther's actually very little meat loss, leaving the thin part of the belly intact actually lends itself to stuffing the fillet - basically the stuffing takes the place of the entrails.
4TasteSake 1 year ago
this isn't butterfly filleting like the title suggests, just filleting
rylematou 2 years ago
@rylematou he left it in one piece..if it was simply filleting it you would start the same way but once you got back to the dorsal fin you would stick your knife straight out threw the gut from the dorsal fin side with the knife laid flat against the spine and in one quick motion slice the back half of the fillet off the spine...THEN go back and finish tracing over the ribs. same thing other side, no awkward last cuts removing it from the tail with plain filleting(and same amount of meat)
jsmallwood2007 1 year ago
very informative, exactly what I was searching for. I agree the resolution quality isn't great but it is nothing more than a minor setback, the presentation is still clear and easy to follow. will be practicing this next week when I bring more trout home.
DrStricklandmd 2 years ago
@DrStricklandmd read my post... quicker and easier and removes same amount of meat in two pieces...even then you should cut the fillets that size in half again before cooking or they will curl up on you in the pan
jsmallwood2007 1 year ago
@jsmallwood2007 - If you start frying the fillet flesh side down first, it won't curl up. if you fry it skin side down the skin immediately shrinks and that's what causes the curling. Brown the flesh side first then flip it over and you're set. Of course you can stuff it, and smoke it also.
4TasteSake 1 year ago
@DrStricklandmd if your going to stuff it and wrap it in tinfoil this is the way to do it here just the same
jsmallwood2007 1 year ago
Somewhat helpful but the low res makes it borderline useless.
UserUnfriendly21 2 years ago
Nice video, thanks
salamon1080 2 years ago
A thorough host but unfortunately the resolution isn't great.
ianberg1 2 years ago
Very nice and thorough job! Great presentation. Very thorough and helpful. Thanks!
sherm696 2 years ago