Recipe: Delicious Grilled fish collar

Delicious, fresh and tasty.

Grilled fish collar. It's the fish collar you want, the bony triangle of tender, fatty meat tucked between the fish's gills and the rest of its body, a cheap throwaway cut that chefs all over the country going. Grilled Fish Collars You can use the collar from any large fish here. Some good candidates include: striped bass, salmon, lake trout, redfish, tautog, yellowtail, white seabass, really big Pacific rockfish or largemouth bass, lingcod, snapper or grouper, and sablefish, also known as black cod.

Grilled fish collar Ponzu is a thin sauce made from soy sauce and a Japanese citrus. The salty, sour sauce cuts the fattiness of the fish collar for a perfect balance in flavor that Japanese cooking is known for. This dry rubbed grilled grouper collar (AKA fish collars or necks) recipe is visually stunning and also delicious. You can cook Grilled fish collar using 4 ingredients and 3 steps. Here is how you achieve that.

Ingredients of Grilled fish collar

  1. You need 300 g of Nice chunk of fatty fish.
  2. It's of (In the video, I’m using the collar of yellowtail).
  3. Prepare of Belly of salmon, fatty mackerel, good size sardine, red snapper, etc. you can try with all sorts.
  4. You need of Salt.

A little about fish collars: we have a CSF (community supported fishery) from Abundant Seafood in Charleston, SC. Last week, Mark (the fishmonger) had Grouper Collars. Great recipe for Grilled fish collar. Grilled fish at home, like the ones you get in Japanese izakaya restaurants.

Grilled fish collar instructions

  1. Salt the fish and wait 20 minutes..
  2. Moisture is extracted from the fish, so please wipe that off. You are wiping the smell of the fish off too, so this step is important..
  3. Grill it. I use fish grill with no temperature control. Medium high heat for 8 minutes. Done!.

Why do I want to share this? Because many people do not know how simple and tasty it is to just grill a fish and eat it. Fish collars are really popular in Japanese cooking, like hamachi kama, which is yellowtail collar. That's how I serve it too, broiled Japanese-style, but with local fish. I've been able to source pollack collars for a long time, which is just a really succulent unused piece of fish.