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Boundary Waters / Quetico Discussion Forums >> General Boundary Waters / Quetico Discussion >> Lessons learned - #2 Fire is your friend
https://quietjourney.com/community/YABB.cgi?num=1379505095 Message started by mastertangler on Sep 18th, 2013 at 11:51am |
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Title: Re: Lessons learned - #2 Fire is your friend Post by kypaddler on Oct 4th, 2013 at 1:14pm
We eat mostly smallmouth and walleye (tho I love pike too). Usually we fry them because our "Captain" is a master with the skillet -- never oily, perfect flakes -- and we eat a lot of fish sandwiches for lunch. On an early September trip to Quetico this year, eight guys had as much fish as they could eat every night except for the longest travel days.
We also poach fish (usually walleyes or pike), or cook the fish, break into chunks and mix with rice. In all instances, you gut, fillet and skin the fish, of course. But one thing that's fun to do is to take larger fish and cook them over an open fire while "crucified" on a stick stuck in the ground. I believe it's called panassing, or something like that. For those who've never seen it: Prepare the fish by gutting it and taking off the head, tail and fins (if it's a trout, get rid of the mud vein). Then you ease out the spine and ribs with your thumb. Don't scale or skin. Then you "crucify" the fish by 1) cutting two sticks about pencil diameter or a little bigger, sharpening the ends and inserting horizontally through the farthest sides of the now-split-open fish to hold it apart, and 2) cutting a third, much longer and somewhat thicker stick and splitting it down the middle about half of its length. Sharpen the end that's not split (it goes into the ground). Slide the fish and horizontal sticks down between the split ends, and tie it shut at the top with spruce root or a piece of cord. (It looks like a lowercase "t" with two cross beams.) All the sticks should be peeled where they touch the fish. Sprinkle salt and pepper and any other spices on the fish, then stick it into ground so the flesh side of the fish catches the heat. Watch and smell it bake. When it's done, take off the sticks, spread the fish on a rock and pull off the flaky flesh with forks. Medium-sized fish are easiest to work with. -- kypaddler |
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