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Food and Drink

Another oldie, but a goodie – here is an easy way to grill redfish for those who don’t like to leave the skin on (my wife).

I often keep the redfish I catch because they are so delicious on the grill. I’ve experimented with a lot of different ways of cooking and preparing the fish, but I always come back to this simple recipe. It works just as well with trout, black drum, sheepshead, and flounder, so don’t think this is redfish specific.

What you’ll need: Redfish fillets (scales off), aluminum foil, butter, olive oil, worcestershire sauce, lemon juice, lemon pepper, blackening seasoning, cajun seasoning, and beer of your choice.

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– Fillet your redfish with the scales off (or thaw those fillets from a previous trip, fresh fish is always better however).

– Light your coals and open up a beer.

– Tear off a piece of aluminum foil big enough to completely encapsulate your fish fillet, place your fillet on the foil.

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– Gently season each side of your fish fillet with cajun seasoning, lemon pepper, and blackening seasoning.  Don’t overdo it.

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– Pour a little bit of olive oil, worcestershire, and lemon juice on your fillet. Not too much, just a little strip down the fillet.

– Add about 1 Tbsp. worth of butter to your fillet. I usually cut it into 2 pieces and place them on the fillet.

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– Fold up your fillet and repeat with the rest of your fish. I usually grill up 4 fillets so I can have leftovers the next day.

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– By now your coals should be hot, so place your foiled fish on the grill.

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– You’ll cook the fish for 20 minutes. My grill is not that big so at 10 minutes I rotate the inside fillets with the outer ones.

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– I like to serve each fillet with a side of rice/pasta and a vegetable.

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If you’ve got any leftover crawfish etoufee, add that to the top of the redfish when it’s done, talk about good! Hope y’all enjoy this simple way of preparing redfish. I know I did!

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Apologies to Outkast, but the title fit.

It’s a new year (kinda), I figured it was time to transition to a blog all my own. This is something I’ve wanted to do for a little while now, but I could never settle on a name. A name really shouldn’t be all that important, the content is what is really important, but for some reason it weighed heavily on me. Mountains to Marsh fits me, I think. My two favorite places to spend time and fish. Two totally different ecosystems, styles of fishing. Plus it sounds pleasant and rolls off the tongue (thanks alliteration!).

I will still post kayak fishing updates to my little space on Jackson Kayak’s site, which will also go here, but so will everything else. Which means this blog won’t be fishing-specific (though it will be heavily featured). I do have a life, albeit a small one, outside of fishing. So, anything and everything that interests me, will probably grace these pages. That could be beer, food, family, music, sports, or whatever else I’m into at the time. This could be a good thing, this could be a bad thing. I hope this means I will update the content often. Often may not mean daily, but I’ll try. I guess it really depends on what kind of feedback I get, which I’ll admit, does provide some motivation.

Anyway, thanks for visiting, and cheers to 2012!