Had it steamed with a little bit of green onion and soya sauce. Also had it grilled quickly. So good, by far one of my fave fish. Nice and oily..... Post a pic of the finished product so I can drool....
Had it steamed with a little bit of green onion and soya sauce. Also had it grilled quickly. So good, by far one of my fave fish. Nice and oily..... Post a pic of the finished product so I can drool....
Have some friends who know and one of the Standard Chinese methods for filet of White fish like ling or Rock Cod is steamed (don't over cook) followed by placement on a platter and sprinkled with the green part of chopped green onions and then drizzled lightly with hot oil and Chinese's dark soy sauce. I was surprised that the hot oil added to the flavor and silkyness when I was taught this method.
I have been meaning to try this method with wild onions. They are strongly flavored and have somewhat of a garlic like flavor and look like chives. If you find them on VI don't over pick and keep the location secret or they will be gone.
Also known as Sablefish, huge in the fish market now. Most black cod was heavily smoked in years past and commonly poached in milk.
Definitely steam or BBQ with a quick dip in flour then oil with soy whisked in
Great table fish
I had a chef tell me that it is called Sablefish unless smoked and the "trade name" that was adopted when smoked was Black Cod? Not sure if there is any truth to that?
Throughout the years there have been numerous fish renames i.e. orange roughy, Chilean seabass... Black cod is also one of them; industrial chemically dyed created liquid "smoke", similar to white springs to enhance their marketability.Sablefish is also marketed as butterfish.
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