YOU'VE BEEN CLEANING WALLEYE WRONG!!! Maximize your BONELESS FILLETS and catch with minimal waste!

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  • čas přidán 25. 05. 2021
  • How to professionally clean your walleye after the catch!

Komentáře • 533

  • @richardthompson8207
    @richardthompson8207 Před 2 lety +32

    You do an excellent job. I'm 70 so I have been cleaning them for a long time. Before we had electric knives, I would just cut the fillet off the rib cage and never open up the abdominal cavity. With the electric I clean them pretty much the same way as you, except I peel the rib cage out with the electric knife. A little twist of the wrist and the rib bones peel right out without wasting meat. The only thing I use the hand knife for is the cheeks and the Y bone zipper cuts. One difference is, I remove the belly lining. Once used to the electric it doesn't take very long to clean Walleyes and very little meat is wasted.

  • @Franklinfishingflies
    @Franklinfishingflies Před 2 lety +6

    Everybody has slight differences cleaning fish, I don't waste meat and I've cleaned for decades. Your method is good and systematic, these comments by others are ridiculous. If you guys wanna see some fish hacking stop at a cleaning station on Lake Erie. You'll see some pros and some absolute amateurs. I ice mine and clean them at home

  • @byrongreen2167
    @byrongreen2167 Před rokem +2

    That’s impressive!! I’ve been cleaning fish for over 50 years and never seen it done this way!!!very good job!!!

  • @eyeguyeyeguy1
    @eyeguyeyeguy1 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Great job. At the very end you mentioned that last piece of meat under the chin. Keep the 2 pectoral fins intact and cut that piece off. Save them in a freezer bag until you get 20-25 and google WALLEYE WINGS. You batter them up and deep fry, and you hold the 2 pec fins in your hands, put the rest in your mouth and pull on the pec fins and all that meat comes right off in your mouth.

    • @mikeypp1977
      @mikeypp1977 Před 25 dny +1

      I keep all walleye wings... Very good and you can eat without actually getting any bones... My wife demands I keep them

  • @murrayandru7527
    @murrayandru7527 Před 2 lety +3

    Cheeks are the best part , glad you showed the procedure !!

  • @lexwaldez
    @lexwaldez Před 2 lety +1

    Not going to lie... you went over it four times and it wasn't until the fourth time that I really got the Y bit. Really nice job explaining everything. I'm not bad at cleaning walleye but I feel like this made me a little better. Thanks for the master class in cleaning walleye. Everyone has a different take but you're really good at explaining.

  • @Puukko79
    @Puukko79 Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome. I'm getting pretty good at cleaning fish, but learned a few new things from your video. Cheers

  • @shanelapp9342
    @shanelapp9342 Před 2 lety +1

    I am impressed. thank you!!!! now I just have to figure out how to Catch then in Colorado. As a Wisconsin native... it was a lot easier back in the midwest to catch them. I really appreciate the video!

  • @pierre6625
    @pierre6625 Před rokem +1

    WOW, Great job explaining the techniques of doing it professionally. Thank you

  • @devinsmith4684
    @devinsmith4684 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks for that thorough explanation… it’s great to see what to do AND what not to do. I understand so much better now.

  • @Beanz931
    @Beanz931 Před rokem +1

    Cleaned my first walleye today. Treated like a trout. Boy, I butchered it. Literally. The second row of bones threw my fillets into a mess of digging out bones. Wish I knew this before! Thanks!

  • @ianmorton4136
    @ianmorton4136 Před rokem +2

    Used to catch these fish in Sweden, they called them gos. In Britain we call them zander, but they are only found in the Norfolk Broads, so I have only fished for them in Sweden. The biggest I caught was 3 kg, but the wife's uncle told me he had one of 10kg ! There is no fight in these fish, you just pull tjhem straight in the boat. However they are the best fish I have ever eaten. My mother in law would clean the fish and cut it into steaks, but leave the skin on. She boiled a big pan with water, salt and pepper with lots of dill. When the water was boiling, she put in the gos steaks and immediately take the pot off the heat, and leave the pot to cool overnight. the next morning the water had turned to jelly and we are the cold cooked fish with the dill jelly , new potatoes and salad from the garden. The best fish I have ever tasted !!

  • @isdaGang
    @isdaGang Před 5 měsíci

    As someone who's watched a ton of fish cleaning videos and is a beginner at cleaning walleye, this video is among the top. Thanks for the great explanation!

  • @garydouglas9359
    @garydouglas9359 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the demo I been fishing for those guys for a lot of years and learned a couple tricks from your video. 👍🙂

  • @richard-miriamwilliams5029

    Thanks so much for the advice and demonstration. me and my family will be sure to try this method this ice fishing season. keep up the good work

  • @robertt2408
    @robertt2408 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Great Video and best tutorial I've seen to date for cleaning walleyes . Liked and Subscribed. Thanks!

  • @19jake23
    @19jake23 Před rokem

    Never knew that last step to get the row of bones. 71 years old and still learning. Great video and great job Brother. Thank you.

  • @zlvirag
    @zlvirag Před rokem +1

    ...the best method i have seen, good job of explaining it all,,,thanks...

  • @charlieauer1672
    @charlieauer1672 Před rokem +2

    great video with detailed explanations - thank you!

  • @thegranitekitchen8214
    @thegranitekitchen8214 Před 3 lety +4

    I can only imagine how good those would taste! Clean job my friend.

    • @hawyeetv135
      @hawyeetv135  Před 3 lety

      Thanks a million! They taste excellent!!

  • @larrygoodmanson8964
    @larrygoodmanson8964 Před 2 lety +1

    Perfect. You nailed it. Great tip on the cheek meat as well!

  • @stuspring6301
    @stuspring6301 Před rokem +2

    You sir are a good teacher!!

  • @mikebarbosa7597
    @mikebarbosa7597 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you. I appreciate the lesson very much.

  • @jakeowens1770
    @jakeowens1770 Před 2 lety +2

    Like the hand tearing technique, I'm definitely using this. THanks man

  • @Droidsalad
    @Droidsalad Před 2 lety

    Great video. Thanks for taking the time to post this. Very helpful.

  • @alleycat1117
    @alleycat1117 Před rokem

    Great job!! Walleyes are a favorite!!😊

  • @surf6009
    @surf6009 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for the video. I'm going to to change a few things in my clean style. I bet they tasted great !

    • @traviswilson5410
      @traviswilson5410 Před rokem

      This guy doesn't save the wings....walleye wings are delish

  • @ChasingtheKraken
    @ChasingtheKraken Před rokem

    Awesome. Liked and subscribed. I haven't cleaned a fish in years so I appreciate the great video. Cheers.

  • @AndreyMusvitskas
    @AndreyMusvitskas Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing this technique

  • @Kimbeattie
    @Kimbeattie Před 2 lety

    Great video well done my wife and kids favorite are the cheeks. I always have a rough time with the ribs looking forward to ice off up here in Canada. Thanks from Canada

  • @FORDEVR
    @FORDEVR Před 2 lety

    Awesome. I’ve never seen the zipper method before. can’t wait to try it.
    If you do a future video I would love to see you teach this method to someone that doesn’t know how to fillet. Then it really helps another newbie. Help them do one or 2 and then let them do one alone with no help or suggestions. Them do a 4 th one and show them what they did right and wrong. Thanks again. 👌
    liked and subscribed.

  • @oldogre5999
    @oldogre5999 Před 2 lety +8

    Did anyone else's arsehole start puckering up at 4:40 when he started working that knife towards the fingers on his other hand? About 60 years ago I was taught to NEVER cut TOWARDS yourself and other than one incident of not listening about a day after the lesson I LEARNED WHY you don't do that and I don't think I've ever done it again!! Don't be lazy take the extra two seconds it takes to get your body parts away from the blade!

  • @arcticgummibear4500
    @arcticgummibear4500 Před rokem +1

    I like your technique. Thanks.

  • @curthill7123
    @curthill7123 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm gonna try this next time thank you. I cut the bones out differently but this is a good approach.

  • @prestoncraftchick7515
    @prestoncraftchick7515 Před 2 lety +4

    Don’t forget the pc around the fins by the gills, makes great walleye wings!!

    • @andrewscrutton
      @andrewscrutton Před 2 lety

      I was gonna say the very same, almost better than the cheeks

    • @cobia1794
      @cobia1794 Před 2 lety +1

      We call them the rabbits here.. good chunk of meat!

  • @nathandowney813
    @nathandowney813 Před 2 lety +3

    Try flipping the fillet ribs down and use the cordless to remove the ribs. Super fast once you get the hang of it.

  • @talon769
    @talon769 Před 2 lety

    Great job explaining zippering! Thanks!!

  • @user-er8uw2lp3i
    @user-er8uw2lp3i Před rokem +10

    If you don't bleed your fish it is worth the effort. I am convinced the fish tastes much better. I bleed every fish I keep.

    • @DEVILDOG1964
      @DEVILDOG1964 Před rokem

      PLACEBO EFFECT GOOGLE IT.

    • @PrometheusZandski
      @PrometheusZandski Před rokem +1

      @@DEVILDOG1964 Hey Jim, you should really check that keyboard of yours. It seems the caps lock is always on.
      I would recommend you google Dunn and Kruger effect. You are a prime example.

  • @Cisco35Kid
    @Cisco35Kid Před 2 lety +1

    I just wish I could always be cleaning a 24 in Walleye- nice video - never seen the zipper method - will try it this summer

  • @johns875
    @johns875 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice video. Thanks for the explanation. What size fillet knife are you using to take the bones out?

  • @bobanderson9707
    @bobanderson9707 Před 2 lety

    Great video - I have been struggling with the bones along the back for years.

  • @MrJonnymacs
    @MrJonnymacs Před 2 lety +1

    Great job, you make the off hand cut look easy

  • @kevinmedland4335
    @kevinmedland4335 Před 2 lety +5

    never seen the splitting the meat and tearing the bones out before
    after over 40 yrs of guiding and many hours in a fishhouse i've seen lots of techniques
    i like to clean fish right from the livewell
    and if you take the rib bone off while still on the skin they tear out easier

    • @jiggyjay682
      @jiggyjay682 Před 2 lety

      What ? Most guys zip their walleye filets.

    • @kevinmedland4335
      @kevinmedland4335 Před 2 lety

      @@jiggyjay682 not around here where there's a lot of walleys cleaned...
      And not a lot of guides use electric knives either

  • @nataluehunter5117
    @nataluehunter5117 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for sharing. Awesome.

  • @jeffatgorbysgrill9480
    @jeffatgorbysgrill9480 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the vid. Just subscribed. Keep em coming.

  • @geraldkoth654
    @geraldkoth654 Před 2 lety +3

    We do the same cut on the throat latch, all fish. For walleye we are usually trolling so we cut the latch and put the fish on one of those old fashioned metal stringers with the hook latches and drag them for a few minutes to let the blood out and not have it in the boat or the cooler.

    • @fixtritephil7712
      @fixtritephil7712 Před 2 lety

      5 Gal.pail of water

    • @jimcarpenter4454
      @jimcarpenter4454 Před 2 lety

      I use my side cutters (for braid line) to cut a gill or 2. Give them a few minutes in livewell to bleed out. If the livewell temp is cold or not overloaded (erie) and air temp hot, I wait til end of trip and cut them all at once. Kinda sucks but saves ice and don't have to remember to transfer fish to cooler if on a good bite. If I had a bigger boat, I'd do a 5 gal bucket with ice water...

  • @patklinger9894
    @patklinger9894 Před 2 lety +2

    thanks for the info.. now I just need to catch' em

  • @jayskin2615
    @jayskin2615 Před 2 lety

    I was taught nearly the same method when I was a kid. Nicely done.

  • @jjz814
    @jjz814 Před 7 dny +1

    I watched like 10 videos on how to do this for the first 3 i caught last night. Then this morning i see yours and it makes much more sense and know more for next time. My fillets were more like fish sticks from the prior videos. Im going to buy one of those electric knives now. Setup an amazon link to it so you can get residual income from it. Gained a sub from me. Thanks.

  • @derrickkaseman9843
    @derrickkaseman9843 Před 2 lety

    I always have issues getting the rib cage out I end up cutting around it then flipping the cage around and taking the meat off from behind it you make it look way too easy lol are you cutting straight down then angling behind the ribs? That first set of bones you just cut through?

  • @Kingfisher276
    @Kingfisher276 Před 2 lety +3

    Oh and the middle row of bones can be cut out 3/4 of the way to the tip of the tail , so you can fry a nice slab of meat rather than ripping it in half

  • @sf8139
    @sf8139 Před 2 lety

    great video bud, i always keep the cheeks on walleye but never thought about it for pike. I dont keep alot of pike anyways but maybe I will keep a few smaller ones now

  • @retiredboxingref7620
    @retiredboxingref7620 Před 2 lety

    I've always pulled the zipper wide as can be. And of course, now I know why there are bones!
    Thanks sir!

  • @rogercarlson2330
    @rogercarlson2330 Před 2 lety +1

    I got an old skinzit type tool from back in the day. What a great tool for taking out ribs.

  • @terrywilliams605
    @terrywilliams605 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video and a good tutorial for those that want to learn. The only thing that I would add would be to cut and cook the rabbit ears at the bottom you said was good for soup.
    My daughters love them fried as well.

  • @samtate1260
    @samtate1260 Před rokem +3

    That’s the way I do it also but I don’t have a electric knife I just use the old wooden handle Rapla keep it sharp as a razor blade cracker batter and throw them in the hot grease 👍🤘

  • @kimgugisberg5582
    @kimgugisberg5582 Před 2 lety +1

    Nicely done!

  • @ericneering6357
    @ericneering6357 Před rokem

    What do you do about the P5? How do you get the beef about 400 times

  • @dodgeman36tw
    @dodgeman36tw Před rokem +2

    Great video thanks.

  • @anthonylewis9572
    @anthonylewis9572 Před 2 lety

    Nice. Good job. I need one of those cordless bubbas

  • @MrIndyjoe
    @MrIndyjoe Před rokem

    Great video, Thanks!

  • @leeskithree
    @leeskithree Před 2 lety +1

    Good job. I pretty much do the same. I have one suggestion, use a fork when taking the rib bones out, works great for me. for those that say it doesn't make a difference bleeding the fish out, that is just nonsense, I have been catching Walleye for 40 years and just started doing it about 8 years ago, less mess (blood) filleting and the fillet is much whiter. I was stubborn at first but don't be

  • @mblender1
    @mblender1 Před 2 lety +1

    From a professional chef stand point. I specialized in fresh fish and had to fillet fish for the first 4 hrs every day. Throw that cheap Walmart biginners fillet knife away and get a formed no-slip plastic handled flexible 6” fillet knife by Forshner w/ good german stainless steel that will hold a good edge and ten strokes with a steel and it’s good as new. You have a great method and I will utilize this technique with my favorite fish. “Lunker” lake trout and cutthroat. Im not criticizing, just an observation. You made it look real easy with the electric knife then, struggled with the $2 wood handled nightmare with the pot metal blade. I’m impressed with the efficiency of your technique. Thanks

    • @yarcraft1778
      @yarcraft1778 Před rokem

      I use a Havalon fillet knife with interchangeable blades. Love it.

    • @carldymond110
      @carldymond110 Před rokem

      If you shave the red off the skin side of the fish they tasted better.

  • @Steven-hn6hg
    @Steven-hn6hg Před 2 lety

    I’ve been doing something similar but cutting it and this pulling the bones out by hand is a great trick with no bones. No more having to hear old timers say ohh those bones cook out…. Yeah right lol. Thanks for the awesome tip!

  • @profisher7818
    @profisher7818 Před rokem +1

    Hi , Im from fla. Just curious what state are you from and what water do you fish ? Thanks..Pop's

  • @duanetheoldtimer4755
    @duanetheoldtimer4755 Před rokem +1

    Oh sorry, excellent video. I learned something, thanks

  • @beebob1279
    @beebob1279 Před 2 lety

    It's nice to see a cooler of walleye. Where I live a walleye caught once in a while is a good job done.

  • @milehigh3054
    @milehigh3054 Před 2 lety +1

    great vid. exactly how I do it!

  • @banjohappy
    @banjohappy Před 2 lety

    Thanks HawYeeTV. I have not caught a lot of walleye so it is good to know there is a row of bones that goes the whole length of the fillet, besides the ribs and pin bones along the ribs. Nice that removing the long row of bones also takes out the bloodline too, that could add a stronger flavor to the fish. I did know about the cheeks. Did you know that bullhead also have cheeks?

  • @Askeyb2011
    @Askeyb2011 Před 2 lety +1

    Seen a video a while back bleeding salmon by making that same cut at the bottom of the throat. The guy used cheap pruning shears. We tried that. Bonk the salmon. Then clip the area just below gills and the bleed out really well. I put them in fish box and dump bucket of water to help clear blood from the salmon. Then put on ice in fish bag. Works great and no blood left in fish hardly at all.
    Also not sure if will work for Walleye scrap meat from fillet with Tea Spoon. For salmon and other fish I have used the spoon gets a lot of meat off bone. I use it to make salmon Chowder.

  • @charlieauer1672
    @charlieauer1672 Před 2 lety

    great video with attention to details

  • @user-di8cf2xj5m
    @user-di8cf2xj5m Před rokem +1

    Same way I have been cleaning since my dad taught me over 50 yrs ago lol. He did it for 30 years prior. Never bled them out either perch bluegill bass all the same

  • @gregorycarns60
    @gregorycarns60 Před rokem +2

    Nice job! Bleeding the fish really makes a difference, fillets are nearly white, no blood at all.

  • @Mud-N-Ice
    @Mud-N-Ice Před 3 měsíci

    Do you ever keep the brisket?

  • @swdetroitjesus
    @swdetroitjesus Před rokem +1

    Nice work!

  • @SinisterMindset
    @SinisterMindset Před 2 lety

    Never knew about bleeding them until a few years ago, definitely improved taste.

  • @brianpeterson5516
    @brianpeterson5516 Před 2 lety

    Well thank you I definitely learned something useful today! Only thing i would do is leave as much skin on as possible.

  • @Clarkstar_Writes
    @Clarkstar_Writes Před 2 lety +2

    This was absolutely the most awesome fish 🐠 cleaning video ever! This guy is totally professional, and that part with the center set of bones 🦴 being removed was completely awesomeness! This is absolutely a brilliant teaching tool and wonderful learning experience.
    Thanks a billion!

  • @deanmacka4975
    @deanmacka4975 Před rokem +1

    Not a bad looking fish mate , Top Stuff 👍

  • @r37l36
    @r37l36 Před 2 lety +3

    Interesting video. I do mine a little different up here in Manitoba, Canada.
    After I fillet it off the skin (everything’s the same up to that point) I will cut off the tail section about the back 1/3 and that’s one boneless piece (I do not split the tail filet). Then I feel with my finger and cut out a thin strip to get the y-bones only up to the last one I can feel with my finger tip when I run it over the inside of the fillet. That piece will usually be cut in half lengthwise to separate the thicker back meat from the rib meat for even cooking. I deep fry in oil while canoeing Canadian shoe lunch (Cajun or beer batter for me). I often take the wings/butterfly’s and cheeks too.
    That fish goes from swimming to fry pan in less than 30 mins. I’m craving ice out so bad.

    • @r.chambers2736
      @r.chambers2736 Před 2 lety +1

      I also cut the tail pieces off and those are the pieces my young boys used to get until they got older as there were absolutely no bones there . And they never had a bad experience eating fish

    • @WheresTheSauce
      @WheresTheSauce Před 2 lety

      Is dat how dey doo et up der in manitooba?

    • @timwhiteside1386
      @timwhiteside1386 Před 2 lety

      Try eating just red part in the tail area. How does that taste? It's bad and filled with mercury. Get that out and your fillets will taste better.

    • @r37l36
      @r37l36 Před 2 lety

      @@timwhiteside1386 Thanks for your reply.
      I typically don’t have dark red on my fillets. I have filleted hundreds of walleye in my life and have not witnessed that dark meat. This could be because of a few reasons but I’m not entirely sure which one or more would contribute to it most. Probably the fact that I don’t keep big walleye. Usually 3-4 lbs sometimes 5ish max.
      I also always bleed my fish but you’re commenting on the dark meat on the outermost flesh next to the skin along the lateral line so I don’t think bleeding would eliminate that. Not sure if it’s because I only keep the smaller ones or that I fillet right away (never put whole fish on ice) or maybe it’s that the water temps are cooler but most of my fillets I eat are clean almost translucent/white and void of that red meat. However, the smallmouth bass and pike I catch do have more of the dark meat that you’re talking about. That’s possibly because I catch them in the shallows more often.
      Anyway, I will keep an eye out and I will try removing and discarding it in the future if I see it.

    • @jimcarpenter4454
      @jimcarpenter4454 Před 2 lety

      The dark meat is fatty and bioacumulates pcb's not mercury. Fish will taste milder if you trim off red meat plus reduces pcb's. It takes practice but you can float the knife on bigger eyes when skinning to get a lot of it. Trim rest with sharp knife or easiest is soak in ice water overnite if convenient and trim off before freezing.

  • @danield954
    @danield954 Před 2 lety +1

    First, thanks on showing how to pin bone a walleye fillet, that part I didn't know. One helpful tip, after bleeding the fish roll the fish in a piece of newspaper and throw it in the fridge for a few hours before you fillet it. When you take the fish out of the fridge and remove the paper you will have a fish that is not slimy and straight as a board and much easier to fillet.

  • @lesmewis5291
    @lesmewis5291 Před 2 lety +3

    you can save the front fins as well. There is lots of meat attached. We call them butterflies. Very tasty dipped in shrimp sauce.

    • @majscrap2629
      @majscrap2629 Před 2 lety +1

      Battered and fried with Hot sauce. Good stuff!

  • @dr.paulblaser8612
    @dr.paulblaser8612 Před 2 lety +2

    Another nice video! Going to Burwell this afternoon. Planning to use the "Y" zipper technique. BTW....I did notice the geese at about the 13:45 mark. Sounds like the next video will be about early season goose hunting. Good fishing 🎣👍.

    • @hawyeetv135
      @hawyeetv135  Před 2 lety

      Absolutely, I’m going to get after those early season geese soon!!

    • @dr.paulblaser8612
      @dr.paulblaser8612 Před 2 lety

      At this point in the video, I'd love for you to grab a 12 guage and add a bonus goose cleaning video!

  • @AcousticHills
    @AcousticHills Před 2 lety +1

    Great work!

  • @mikearnold1023
    @mikearnold1023 Před 2 lety +5

    My exact technique, except I trim all red looking meat off

    • @bradbankhead7074
      @bradbankhead7074 Před 2 lety

      Yeah! That dark meat on the back definitely needs trimmed off!

  • @boxturtle6809
    @boxturtle6809 Před 2 lety +2

    Here on the Maumee River, when we're done fishing, we cut their gills and let them bleed out as we make our way to the bank (shore).

  • @davemoss4303
    @davemoss4303 Před rokem +1

    Nice job!

  • @xringkiller
    @xringkiller Před 2 lety +4

    There is no better bite of fish in the world better than a walleye cheek! Change my mind……

    • @matlagranyeule6027
      @matlagranyeule6027 Před 2 lety +3

      True, walleye cheek is filet mignon of fish

    • @kellyzillmer3932
      @kellyzillmer3932 Před 2 lety

      I've gone ocean fishing three times. Anything we caught was equal to or better than fresh water. That being said there is nothing better or more fun than a walleye cheek. Take the throats as well there is a good chunk of meat to be had. And your buffet table will look exotic with them all golden brown with fins on. Use the fins as a handle, insert into mouth and use your teeth to scrape off the meat. Every time I do it it starts quite the chatter.

  • @rayperez3426
    @rayperez3426 Před 9 měsíci

    Great detailed video. Lots of fishermen don't bleed out their fish. Without bleeding out their fish, they get a big blood line in the center of their fish. Especially on redfish.

  • @isabellascarpone4557
    @isabellascarpone4557 Před 3 lety +2

    Is this method doable without the electric knife? Like is it possible to get through the rib bones with a non electric fillet knife?

    • @hawyeetv135
      @hawyeetv135  Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, great question. This is the way I did it before I owned an electric knife, it’s absolutely do-able with any fillet knife, just make sure it’s sharp before you start!

  • @timparker7275
    @timparker7275 Před rokem

    Most thorough lesson I've seen . ..
    Great...
    Do you take the wings as well

  • @johnwashington9590
    @johnwashington9590 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks so much

  • @kissingthehomiesizntgay4718
    @kissingthehomiesizntgay4718 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I didn’t even know that those little black things were bones lol you don’t even notice them when eating it why do the extra work to remove them

  • @BeeRockk4
    @BeeRockk4 Před rokem +1

    Great video. I will be purchasing one of those electric knives for sure. How long does a blade last before you need to replace it?

  • @lomgshorts3
    @lomgshorts3 Před rokem

    Is way we clean walleye and pike up on the St. Lawrence, saves a lot of meat compared to the old way. We use an electric knife on the big sunfish, blue gill and croppie to filet them too. Started to do that back in the 70's.

  • @ronking418
    @ronking418 Před rokem

    Great video

  • @freakyjames2
    @freakyjames2 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice cleaning. When it comes to cheeks it’s no harm to leave the skin on, adds a nice crisp to the bites if deep frying

  • @briansiemens6428
    @briansiemens6428 Před 2 lety

    That’s a really slick way of getting rid of the y bones, does that work on pike also?

  • @noahkilby7041
    @noahkilby7041 Před 2 lety +1

    The pelvic fins ( on the bottom of the fish by the gills) you can always cut those off and fry em up. Almost like a walleye wing

  • @JeffDahmer-q7f
    @JeffDahmer-q7f Před 7 dny

    Dude said ' lotta guys miss out on the cheeks ". I had to put that out there lol