Challenging Myself To Filet Whole Salmon With No Experience

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2024
  • Not really a How-to filet a whole salmon. SquareSpace : 10% off your 1st order using www.squarespace.com/frenchguy
    Learning how to fillet fish at home empowers home cooks with greater control over the quality and freshness of their ingredients. It allows for customization in portion sizes and cuts, catering to individual preferences and recipes. Additionally, mastering this skill opens up a world of culinary possibilities, enabling home cooks to explore diverse cooking techniques and recipes that showcase the natural flavors and textures of fresh fish. Beyond the kitchen, knowing how to fillet fish enhances self-sufficiency and fosters a deeper appreciation for the artistry of cooking from scratch.
    To fillet a whole salmon, start by laying the fish flat on a clean cutting board with its belly facing upward. Use a sharp fillet knife to make a shallow incision just behind the gills, running the blade along the length of the fish toward the tail. Next, angle the knife slightly downward and cut along the backbone, using smooth, controlled motions to separate the flesh from the bones. Once you've removed one fillet, repeat the process on the other side of the fish. Finally, carefully remove any remaining bones and skin from the fillets using the knife or fish tweezers, and rinse them under cold water before cooking or storing. Practice and patience are key, especially for beginners tackling this task for the first time.
    Ebisu fishmonger : poissonneri...
    I sell my own kitchen tools online 🎉 : www.salutcompany.com
    Subscribe to "La Technique" Newsletter, and awaken your inner Chef frenchguycooking.ck.page/932a...
    Support my work on : / frenchguycooking
    Get My cookbook : smarturl.it/FrenchGuyCooking
    Get my posters and t-shirts : www.frenchguycooking.com/shop...
    Music by Artlist : artlist.io/artlist-70446/?art...
    Amazing Video Footage by Artgrid.io : artgrid.io/Artgrid-114820/?ar...
    Director, Author, Host & Camera : Alex
    Editor and Co-Author : Joshua Mark Sadler
    Producer : Eva Zadeh
    Editor and 2nd camera operator : Lou Assous
    Second Editor : Josh John
    Assistant Editor : Sean Miller
    Salut,
    Alex
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 525

  • @milazbenecka
    @milazbenecka Před 26 dny +343

    I used to fillet salmon as a part of my summer job as a teenager. Some tips:
    1) Clean fillets with the skin should be between 60 and 70% of the weight of gutted fish (60% and below is beginner, 70% is pro level). Try to weight it next time before and after to see where is your cutting level :)
    2) Very sharp knife is your friend. Sawing motion by a dull knife damages the meat.
    3) You cut mostly with just the tip and knife needs to slide on the bones. The more practice the more accurate and faster you get.

    • @madil2259
      @madil2259 Před 26 dny +3

      Good tips, my friend.

    • @faithsrvtrip8768
      @faithsrvtrip8768 Před 26 dny +6

      Yes. A good fileting knife is critical, as well. I finally bought one after butchering a Montana lake salmon with a chef's knife. I was so embarrassed by the pictures of my little ragged filets! I used to buy a whole Copper River salmon at Fred Meyer. Those are big and I did use my basic chef's knife but the fish was big enough it didn't show. Unlike the lake salmon (trout really) in Montana.

    • @milazbenecka
      @milazbenecka Před 26 dny +2

      @@faithsrvtrip8768 Yes, i agree. I though it was obvious :-) Fillet knife is essential, because it is relatively slim (narrow tip aswell) and flexible. I dont think you can do a very good job with wide chefs knife even if you are skilled.

    • @bowow0807
      @bowow0807 Před 26 dny +3

      @@milazbenecka it can depend, since let's not forget that japanese knifes for filleting fish are the total opposite of a western filleting knife, a deba is very thick and has literally zero flex, but they still get beautiful fillets using them. There are many videos of japanese guys here on youtube demonstrating on various kinds of fish. Though I will agree that a chefs knife won't get as good results compared to a dedicated filleting knife be it western or japanese

    • @leeoh7434
      @leeoh7434 Před 26 dny +3

      @@bowow0807 I cut 20 lb salmon almost daily for work lately. I used to fillet salmon with a 10 inch breaking scimitar but I switched to a deba last year,. and the control you have with a quarter inch thick 6 inch blade is awesome once you get used to it. Best I've ever done was 74.8 % yeild on skin on fillets.

  • @salmonburrito8239
    @salmonburrito8239 Před 26 dny +216

    One tip, if you're going to be breaking down salmon more you should get a vaccum sealer. It is so much easier than wrapping it in cling wrap and it keeps for longer.

    • @nlpx
      @nlpx Před 26 dny +1

      This. Vacuum sealing it also helps preventing frostbite, right?

    • @salmonburrito8239
      @salmonburrito8239 Před 26 dny +7

      @@nlpx yes, it does help prevent freezer burn

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 26 dny

      That is alot of fish for one person, and to store it you want to give it the best chance...

    • @smellyvalley
      @smellyvalley Před 25 dny

      Totally agree and never rinse or clean fish with fresh water before freezing. It will go bad

    • @BiggMo
      @BiggMo Před 25 dny +1

      Buy a Vacuum chamber type sealer… the “food saver “ type of vacuum sealer can crush the flesh

  • @billgross1719
    @billgross1719 Před 26 dny +124

    To help with your hands smelling like fish afterwards, wash your hands twice, first with soap and COLD water, then again with soap and warm/hot water. If you just wash like normal with warm/hot water first, you are kind of "cooking" the fish oils and proteins on your skin into your skin.

    • @prapanthebachelorette6803
      @prapanthebachelorette6803 Před 26 dny +4

      Wow thanks 😊

    • @NouriaDiallo
      @NouriaDiallo Před 26 dny +1

      Yes, and it also applies to plates: with fish and eggs you want to wash them cold first, lest the degrading proteins impart them with a funky smell...

    • @JohnnyOcz
      @JohnnyOcz Před 25 dny +1

      Or buy a steel soap bar :)

    • @telluscitizen
      @telluscitizen Před 25 dny +1

      Use fresh half of a lemon for the first wash, then normal soapy wash.

    • @kristiankarstad7766
      @kristiankarstad7766 Před 25 dny

      Put dry ginger in the water. Trust me.

  • @proevilz
    @proevilz Před 26 dny +119

    Alex, will there be a studio update video? Seems like you've finished renovations, but you left us hanging after the video you made of you moving into it.

  • @tomc9453
    @tomc9453 Před 12 dny +1

    The respect angle you mentioned is *_SO_* important and so rare these days. I respect that people don't have the time to prepare and cook everything from scratch these days (including preparing whole round fish, deboning chickens, removing beef suet) but it's an invaluable experience. The familiarity you get with this animal that's essentially died for you fosters a respect for your food that you just don't get with processed, packaged stuff. This includes vegetables too! If you can find places that sell 'ugly' vegetables (vegetables that don't fit the aesthetic standard of most supermarket shelves) they are great because they not only encourage creativity in the kitchen, but also lets you see just how much variety there is in nature, even in veggies from the same species.

  • @jorgenr
    @jorgenr Před 26 dny +22

    Alex: There’s no need to remove the skin when making gravlax. Keeping the skin makes it easier to cut thin slices when it’s cured. Also, remember to add a dash of aquavit when curing it. If you vacuum bag it, it’s also much easier to turn every day as it’s curing.

    • @Bozebo
      @Bozebo Před 25 dny

      I think you meant akvavit. Aqua vitae is also a different thing so could somehow confuse someone and they use that :P

  • @Pscribbled
    @Pscribbled Před 25 dny +9

    Hey Alex, I’m no master at processing whole fish but from my limited experience, I’d recommend scaling the fish while it’s whole to use more of the fish and to make the smaller pieces more useful and tasty (you get to eat the delicious skin). This will also keep your fish and workstation cleaner so that you get less loose scales on the meat while you’re processing

  • @jonathannorthcott1335
    @jonathannorthcott1335 Před 26 dny +21

    This is exactly the video i needed to see today. I feel like i somehow ended up in a job i am unqualified for and watching you do rhis for the first time is bringing me to tears with all the relief i feel.

    • @sfurules
      @sfurules Před 26 dny +1

      You're gonna be ok friend :)

  • @drewgalbraith4499
    @drewgalbraith4499 Před 26 dny +8

    Those belly trimmings are great when you grill them and glaze them with a sauce of reduced Soy, Mirin, sake and some sugar (basically like a teriyaki sauce but not as sweet as grocery store stuff), you can reduce it then store it in a jar where you add ginger and garlic scraps to keep infusing extra flavour (a Kenji trick)

  • @rubenotero7100
    @rubenotero7100 Před 26 dny +16

    to remove the skin quicker, you can make that initial cut at the base of the tail, get a little flap up with the knife, then run your hand down the length under the initial flap and the skin will seperate cleanly from the skin. I learned it from my old chef EZ when I was in my early 20's. He called it the EZ way lol.

  • @eyvindr
    @eyvindr Před 26 dny +21

    My understanding is it's better to buy pre-processed and frozen if it going to be frozen, as home freezers are slower and damage the texture. I've not actually tested this.

    • @mzaite
      @mzaite Před 26 dny +6

      I have, 100% true. You can work around it by using a cooler and Dry Ice to "flash" it down quickly, but it's a bit of a pain. Better to just get as much fish as you can use without freezing. Or plan on only using the home frozen stuff for soups, in the rice cooker, etc... where the texture doesn't matter and the fluid loss ends up back in the food. I do a Salmon "Chili" that rocks pretty hard.

    • @riswampyankee9633
      @riswampyankee9633 Před 25 dny +2

      It’s a little more complicated. You’re not freezing fresh fish, but re-freezing flash-frozen fish. Unless you caught it yourself, all fish are frozen right after they are caught at sea. This kills any parasites and preserves freshness on the way back to the dock. Professional fishmongers have the equipment to flash freeze thawed fish after portioning, or they just set it out in the case for customers to purchase and use immediately. Popping prepped fish into your home freezer may result in… interesting… texture and flavors.

    • @t_y8274
      @t_y8274 Před 22 dny +1

      ​@@riswampyankee9633not all commercials fish is frozen on board, if you buy catch of the day from a smaller trawler or similar it'll be actually fresh. Though I have doubts this salmon was such a fish.

    • @LeahsThings
      @LeahsThings Před 20 dny +1

      Though as a bit of a tip!
      I often buy whole salmon, fillet it, and then salt the fillets for Japanese-style salted salmon. It's not as salty or "cured" the way gravlax is, kinda more like a pre-seasoned fillet-- but nonetheless the salting purges some water out of the fillet, so when I portion and freeze it afterward, the texture is still pretty good.

  • @ohmyitscook
    @ohmyitscook Před 26 dny +5

    always love your videos & how you continue to challenge yourself and further your skills. Thank you for letting us in on your embarrassing journey my friend! Love from Detroit, US

  • @sieem07
    @sieem07 Před 25 dny

    Rarely put comments on video's, but it's so relieving seeing your honesty. To show your struggles, to show your learning curve. Thank you for not hiding this. It's much much more learnful than showing how it's done at the time you mastered it, like so many cooking video's are about. This is unique on CZcams, and I like it!

  • @Fabio-Jose-DragonKing
    @Fabio-Jose-DragonKing Před 26 dny +8

    Daniel here! Salmon is amazing! Thanks For this ❤❤❤❤😊😊

  • @upside_down_01
    @upside_down_01 Před 26 dny +8

    You should try descaling the fish so you can also use the skin by frying with it or deep fry it separately. You could try to scrape the meat off the bones, deep fry the bones, or make a stock with the bones. The fish collar also has a lot of meat you can grill with. The head could be used for soup stock.

    • @tyiu5629
      @tyiu5629 Před 24 dny +2

      +1 on de-scaling first when the salmon is whole. The tiny inedible scales are a pain in the arse later when breaking down the fish. Also +1 on frying the de-scaled skin. One additional benefit of a de-scaled skin is that it will stick to the cutting board. This makes the skinning process easier. I noticed in your video that the skin lifted off the cutting board. This won't happen as easily to skin without scales.

  • @AceAufWand
    @AceAufWand Před 25 dny +1

    Merci Alex ! Ce genre de vidéo est tellement utile, d'une utilité différente des vidéo de ceux qui savent faire. Un grand respect pour l'audace et la confiance en soi qu'il faut pour montrer ces vidéos de première tentatives !

  • @cyndifoore7743
    @cyndifoore7743 Před 26 dny +2

    Great job! Learning new skills is so satisfying.

  • @infin1ty850
    @infin1ty850 Před 26 dny +3

    To the initial question in the video, for me it's simply becauce whole fish are not that common in local grocery stores. If you want whole fish, you have to go out and catch it yourself in most cases.

  • @smiththewright
    @smiththewright Před 26 dny +6

    1:35 The sensation of longing for change is truly one of the most enlightening feelings 💡

  • @GeorgeBuftea
    @GeorgeBuftea Před 26 dny +3

    Few tips:
    1. Before fileting, let the fish sit in a highly diluted vinegar solution. Do not mind the white substance appearing on the surface, just wash it and descale it after about 10 minutes. It the vinegar will remove the slime.
    2. Practice on smaller fish, like trout for example. They are in the same family, so they will anct similar. It's a shame wasting a 150euro fish when you could practice with 10 of 15 euro fish.

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před 26 dny +2

    Alex you're always pushing the limits of yourself and always going above and beyond.Please tell that you're planning to do plenty of incredible recipes for those amazing cuts of salmon! Huge fan! You're the best!

  • @twgok13
    @twgok13 Před 26 dny +3

    Thanks for keeping it down to earth! All the tutorials around are from guys that cut down thousands of fish, they make it seem way too easy...
    Feels like your onion cutting adventure previously :)
    Also, as some1 mentioned below, vacuum sealing those pieces seems like a good idea. You could do an episode on vacuum sealing btw. (how it affects spoiling and clever usage in recipes, like sous vide)

  • @danielsantiagourtado3430
    @danielsantiagourtado3430 Před 26 dny +3

    My account works again alex! And amazing work as always! Seeing you try new things is always a treat! You're always seeking to learn and improve! That's why you're the Best!😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤

  • @ofeklivny
    @ofeklivny Před 26 dny +1

    I LOVE THIS SO MUCH

  • @jjackle6431
    @jjackle6431 Před 26 dny +1

    As a person who has fileted many a fish, I would say you did very well, and I would also say, you certainly have to mess up on a few before you get good at it. Nice to see you take your time, you have to do it correctly before you do it fast. Love the videos! Keep up the good work!

  • @jakobrosenqvist4691
    @jakobrosenqvist4691 Před 26 dny +11

    So about that fish, it wasn't caught in Ireland it was farmed in Ireland. That is not a wild caught fish but a farmed salmon, you can tell by the stubbed fins.

    • @pierevojzola9737
      @pierevojzola9737 Před 26 dny

      Yes, you are spot on, but don’t forget that so called wild caught salmon attract a higher price! Why someone would try out their so called knife skills on the most expensive fish is beyond my understanding. He could have bought a two kilograms cod and had the same experience. This is just an idea from a hunter and angler. Cheers mate. Harera

    • @jakobrosenqvist4691
      @jakobrosenqvist4691 Před 25 dny

      @@pierevojzola9737 personally I would have recommended some smaller fish species where messing up a couple is cheaper, and if you manage to filet snaller fish the big ones are a walk in the park afterwards.

  • @danielsnakano
    @danielsnakano Před 25 dny

    Thanks square space for sponsoring our guy and making today video possible 👍🏻

  • @Kelnx
    @Kelnx Před 26 dny +2

    I don't have much experience filleting fish (although I have filleted what I've caught), but I had a friend who was a serious fisherman and caught BIG fish and he always made a very big deal about keeping the fish cold at all times. Not just for safety reasons, but also he said it was easier to do the cuts when everything is cold and firm. I'm kind of wondering how long that fish you had was out at room temp. He always had his fish sitting in ice right up to the point he started slicing. Of course it helps when you know what you're doing and can get the fish filleted quickly before it gets warm and mushy, and fish meat gets warm fast.

  • @tauajevitattoo8917
    @tauajevitattoo8917 Před 26 dny

    Well done, Alex! You've inspired me to buy a whole fish next time. Like yourself, I feel very comfortable breaking down a whole chicken. Watching you do it with a whole fish made me realize I can learn that, too.

  • @CRJessen
    @CRJessen Před 26 dny

    This is inspiring. Thank you so much.

  • @DanielSann
    @DanielSann Před 26 dny +14

    When you said you had a summer job 20 years ago i was 😳 i searched and i can't believe you are 41, what's the secret? Pasta? 😅

  • @user-neo71665
    @user-neo71665 Před 26 dny

    I grew up on a farm and we had ponds. Butchering cows, pigs, deer, birds, and fish was something I've seen and helped with so many times I was doing it by myself by the time I was 8 or 9 years old.
    For a first time I say ya done pretty well.

  • @skyrere
    @skyrere Před 3 dny

    I truly enjoy the drama you inject into your videos. The passion. :D

  • @TXHeat1776
    @TXHeat1776 Před 24 dny

    Harvesting and processing your own meat increases your connection & gratitude for your food. Well done Alex.

  • @goncalovazpinto6261
    @goncalovazpinto6261 Před 22 dny

    Scale the fish before filleting it. You can make salmon skin "potato chips" on the frying pan.
    Sometimes I take the leftovers (head, spine and tails) boil it with seasoning, recover all the cooked meat that was still attached (I don't spoon any meat from the bone), blend the rest until it is as much a paste as I can make it, pass the paste through a sieve to remove anything solid that didn't blend (bit of bone and the occasional scale), mix the leftover paste with the bits of meat and let it cool. You get a really nice salmon spread to eat on toast!
    I don't think you mentioned this, but a good reason to buy salmon whole is that it's much cheaper.
    Also, when I cook a fish head I always keep the otolithes!

  • @lukeg.4173
    @lukeg.4173 Před 19 dny

    Thank you Alex for making me go to the shop and buy a whole salmon to chop... And i didnt want to spend some money to today haha :D
    Very inspiring videos! Thank you

  • @jsbrads1
    @jsbrads1 Před 25 dny +1

    I’m surprised the shop didn’t scale the fish for you first.
    Also, a Ziploc freezer bag will decrease freezer burn and keep all the fillets in one place for you.

  • @MidoriMushrooms
    @MidoriMushrooms Před 25 dny

    I've been slowly learning to cook (raised on instant food) for about a year and a half now and it is really motivational to see videos like this. I can't do something like this right now, but I've managed to cook bacon without burning it, eggs without overcooking them, and french toast (kinda?) that tasted pretty good. Also learning to make rice dishes.

  • @Erronis666qp
    @Erronis666qp Před 25 dny

    It’s the first episode I could show you how it’s done 😂
    Thanks for years of inspiration 😊

  • @richieh2006
    @richieh2006 Před 25 dny

    Ah good work, Alex. Nice job 🙂

  • @AM-ni3sz
    @AM-ni3sz Před 23 dny

    This is a great video. Well done. I love salmon. It is the king of fish. My wife and I cooked 2 whole Salmon at our son’s Christening. He is now 22 years old. Good memories.🎉

  • @ryancrand
    @ryancrand Před 26 dny +1

    thanks for giving me the confidence to try this. sometimes being uncomfortable is okay.

  • @-alberthofmann1943-
    @-alberthofmann1943- Před 26 dny

    Salut, Alex! Would be nice to see an episode about knives. Which knife to buy, which knifeform to use for different things, sharpening, the right cutting board and so on. Thank you for all your content, inspired me a lot!

  • @silantoine5181
    @silantoine5181 Před 25 dny

    Salut Alex et merci pour cette vidéo.
    Tu mets souvent en lumière des produits de grande qualité et leur transformation (un épisode sur l'ikejime dans cette série serait top d'ailleurs) ou façon de cuisiner.
    J'aimerais tellement que tu nous donnes un éclairage sur la première étape de ce qui arrive dans notre assiette : la production.
    Si tu pouvais avoir accès à des élevages ou des exploitations agricoles et nous partager leurs méthodes pour bien montrer au public la différence avec ce qu'on trouve en supermarché, voire dans 95% boucheries (qui en fait travaillent à peine mieux malheureusement).
    Ça pourrait en influencer certains à manger moins et mieux tout en prenant beaucoup plus de plaisir à cuisiner ces produits et surtout à les savourer.
    Bonne continuation, j'attends la suite avec impatience ! :)

  • @AudyBharksuwana
    @AudyBharksuwana Před 25 dny +1

    When you said you were going to the Fishmonger’s, I thought we’d get to watch them do one fish there, and then you do another fish back at the studio afterwards.

  • @Pitichou37
    @Pitichou37 Před 24 dny

    I like the series, but some matters like this, covering in one episode is nice.
    It's refreshing!

  • @SeDonspeed
    @SeDonspeed Před 25 dny

    This reminded me of the first time I fileted a trout. I did a much worse job then you, because I had a dull knife.😅
    I also never buy frozen animal parts. What you said about qualitiy control and connection is so true!

  • @thorsten5052
    @thorsten5052 Před 25 dny

    Very interesting ... I haven't filleted any fish yet, but I have bought whole gutted fish to smoke. Just washing and preserving the whole fish (even without the innards) gave me the connection to the animal that you describe. Really fascinating.

  • @Monty171089
    @Monty171089 Před 25 dny +1

    I like your channel because you always go for top quality ingridients... Said that I think that salmon isn't really a wild caught salmon but farmed salmon. Farmed salmon is literally junk food and it's totally differnt if compared to the wild one (differen colour, different texture, different amount of fat). Farmed salmon are plenty of colorants and antibiotics. I hope this information will inspire you for another great video! 🙂

  • @SpaceCowboy02
    @SpaceCowboy02 Před 24 dny

    Proud of you Alex. Keep it going. The more you cut fish the better you’ll get

  • @kobiorama
    @kobiorama Před 26 dny +1

    Great video. I do this regularly since getting the whole fish is less expensive than just fillet, and the frozen stuff is just not that good.
    I liked the idea of making a hole in the skin for the skin removal part, will use it myself next time.

  • @benjaminvis
    @benjaminvis Před 24 dny

    I have enormous respect for your expertise and zeal in tackling cooking challenges. This particular one, I undertook about two years ago. We were eating measly pre-cut portions of salmon for too much money, but occasionally the fishmonger would have a good deal on buying whole salmon by the Kg (even considering the weight loss on the fillets). While I have good quality and truly sharp knives, I had no filleting knife and no adecuate pincer. I did descale before starting the work. I'm a bit confused why you didn't here. I used to do this with trout or seabass that I'd cook whole. Afterwards I find that descaling risks damaging the fillet far too easily as the structural integrity is largely gone (perhaps I'm just too rough). I barely had the worktop space required in my kitchen, let alone sufficiently large cutting boards. I watched multiple videos before starting. I struggled a bit with my knife as it wouldn't just follow bones and slide through as instructed (I do think a honed filleting knife is essential to do a good job). So, I think, on the whole, my results were a little more like your first fillet than your second, but not horrible. The mess was horrible, and living in a small apartment with a small kitchen and small fridge-freezer and limited time, it pained me to essentially have to chuck all that wasnt a fillet. It did allow us to eat a few salmon meals witj mire generous portions at marginally lower costs. Yet, if I were to do this regularly, I'd consider it essential to have more appropriate tools and workspace as well as storage options to waste less.

  • @cirrus820travelers9
    @cirrus820travelers9 Před 22 dny

    Ahhh, no judging! Imagine all the critics putting out their 1st video....... everything has a learning curve. Glad to watch your channel.

  • @nicoskefalas
    @nicoskefalas Před 26 dny +2

    Just typical Alex stuff! I wouldn’t be surprised if you ended up in a cooking contest to be fair! I think you could have a proper shot around winning one of those 😂love your videos btw!

  • @dimitrijuszigunovas3782

    bravo, nice episode

  • @digiternst
    @digiternst Před 26 dny +4

    We always leave the skin on for gravlax. Then when serving, take thin slices cutting towards the skin and angling away leaving the skin behind.

    • @Bushman4
      @Bushman4 Před 26 dny +1

      Likewise. It helps provide a clean base to finish the cut on/across.

    • @pierevojzola9737
      @pierevojzola9737 Před 26 dny +1

      Hi, I have been smoking my Steelheads for fifty years and I either split them (taking of the head, fins and scale) and smoke them whole, or I fillet them and (scales & bones removed) and smoke them or bottle them. Bottled trout has to be kept sealed for six months (in my opinion) to improve the taste. As we catch our steelheads in our winter months when there is snow on our volcanoes, we can fish all day as the fish are at chill temperature out of water. Once we catch a fish we kill it immediately, gut it and rake out the gills, scrub out the nerve along the back bone and hang the carcass on a branch. This way of holding on to the fish helps when the Ranger comes to check our licence and the length of the fish. Most places the minimum is 35cm, but I have known of a few where it was 55cm. Cheers mate. Harera

  • @Pilostudio
    @Pilostudio Před 25 dny

    Alex, you need a vacuum machine. It is much better, faster to keep food you buy whole and process yourself. It also protects the food from freezer burn.
    Get a chamber unit, it is much better, and you can vacuum pack liquids like stock, sauces, beans, etc.

  • @jmcr71795
    @jmcr71795 Před 26 dny

    I'm in my 60s and have processed fish, mainly wild-caught, since the 1960s. While I am certainly more experienced than you, and you did have me cringing a bit, you still did a decent job for your first. As a kid, my father and older brothers all fished so I learnt to as well very young, and as my father had an attitude that "If you caught it, you clean it" as well as teaching how to cook it. My mother, born in the 20s and growing up in the 30s and 40s, was never allowed near the family's big wood stove because she was the youngest, which is rather odd in a 2 room shack in a tiny village on bare Manitoba, Canada, prairie, so dad taught her when they met in 1949 after he immigrated from England. Growing up, most of the fish we ate was freshwater wild-caught, but we did have the odd flounder, halibut, or salmon as well as squid, clams (freshwater and sea), oysters, and octopus. When I moved off the prairie and onto the Pacific coast, I really learned salmon! I even went out for a season on a coastal troller fishing salmon (as well as a season prawn fishing, and a couple times crab fishing, but that guy's boat stunk bad of leaking fuel. No surprise to me when he came back to the harbour on fire!). I even have experience with smoking salmon in a Homalco (Indigenous Coast Salish people) hand-split Western Red Cedar smokehouse, with traditional Cedar handmade racks and "fish hangers". Every time I did that, there was the threat of bears, so would spend the night awake with a rifle handy...

  • @theelectricant98
    @theelectricant98 Před 26 dny

    Way to rise to the challenge!

  • @user-is1bk7hc6m
    @user-is1bk7hc6m Před 26 dny

    Merci Alex … super vidéo.. anita

  • @BostonClipper
    @BostonClipper Před 24 dny

    Suggestion follow-up video. You always follow-up :) Why you are great!
    Butterfly on the grill. Square the end of the fillet. Measure in 1.5" (38mm), cut the meat down to but NOT through the skin/scales. Measure 1.5" (38mm), then cut normally to create one portion. Bend the portion along the skin/scales centerline. Oil and tarragon flakes on top. For "X" grill marks (Place on hot grill bars at 45° for 2 minutes, flip in place for 2', rotate 90° for 2', flip in place for 2').
    RESULT - A consistent 1.5" (38mm) thick portion that grills evenly because there is no taper.
    BONUS - The folded portion because the fillet shape resembles a fish crosssection.
    PRESENTATION - Either leave the skin/scales as is to hold together, or glide a dinner knife or fork on both sides of the skin/scales and remove, then slide the portion together neatly.

  • @Havrilo2
    @Havrilo2 Před 26 dny

    Can't wait for some fish vids !

  • @alikartal8426
    @alikartal8426 Před 25 dny

    Go for it!

  • @drbrainlp
    @drbrainlp Před 26 dny +1

    Alex: self teaching master chef. Constantly pushing the limits of himself and always going above and beyond. Keep it up chef! ❤

  • @MarkNieuwenhuizen
    @MarkNieuwenhuizen Před 25 dny

    As I live not far away from a fishing harbor, I have to get my hands on it as well

  • @SoarNC
    @SoarNC Před 26 dny +3

    Try cutting on an angle. Japanese style. Gives a more uniform thickness for cooking. Try salt grilled or with white miso. One table spoonful miso and one tablespoon sake. If you have an air fryer, dinner in 8 minutes.

  • @ShOxCooking
    @ShOxCooking Před 26 dny +426

    At least you didn’t take a better help sponsor for this video

    • @Ineluki_Myonrashi
      @Ineluki_Myonrashi Před 26 dny +60

      I swear we need to make a petition to get him to do better with his vetting of sponsors..I love Alex, but some of his sponsor choices give me a gross feeling.

    • @cyprusmiraque
      @cyprusmiraque Před 26 dny +31

      Finally someone who acknowledges how messed up better help is

    • @Ineluki_Myonrashi
      @Ineluki_Myonrashi Před 26 dny +17

      @@cyprusmiraque Many of us know how bad they are, more of us need to tell content creators to stop taking money from them. They WILL respond to vocal backlash.

    • @respectfulplayer
      @respectfulplayer Před 26 dny

      squarespace kills kids in africa

    • @Coineanaich
      @Coineanaich Před 26 dny +6

      ​@@Ineluki_Myonrashino they won't

  • @hughcoleman3866
    @hughcoleman3866 Před 25 dny

    If you ever go to Alaska, there is a pub in Seaward where they do a sockeye salmon rilette (sic). This is a must do!!! I will never toast salmon as good I think.

  • @ChelleWesJane
    @ChelleWesJane Před 26 dny +1

    Try doing it with a deba knife instead of a fillet knife and see how that feels & if you want another challenge, try sukibiki on the salmon. Removing the scales from skin by cutting them which makes it perfect for dry aging or smoking with skin on.

  • @justpooky
    @justpooky Před 26 dny +1

    Hey Alex,
    Several options for you when doing fish.
    You may find it easier to use a filleting knife rather than a boning knife.
    taking the head off before you try filleting the knife might make it less of a daunting task. Also, if you take the head off, you can just go straight down the spine.

  • @bigbird2451
    @bigbird2451 Před 26 dny +1

    I used to have the ideal job in a restaurant in Santa Cruz. I'd go in early in the morning and start by roasting veal bones for stock. Then I'd do all the pastry work. Then get the bones in the stock pot. Then I'd portion all of the proteins: fillet and portion salmon, halibut or whatever other fish needed and trim and portion beef fillet and New York steaks. Solo meditative work in a quiet kitchen and no line work at all.

  • @momoii3838
    @momoii3838 Před 26 dny +1

    That is a beautiful fish

  • @Fabio-Jose-DragonKing
    @Fabio-Jose-DragonKing Před 26 dny +1

    Early! Love your content alex!

  • @pinguin34
    @pinguin34 Před 25 dny

    Fais des chips avec la peau ! C'est la première chose que je fais chaque fois que j'achète mes filets, super simple à faire et un vrai délice.

  • @LeahsThings
    @LeahsThings Před 20 dny

    I think you did pretty well, especially for a first try!
    Though I wanted to tell you through the screen to please scale the fish before you start filleting it. It will be easier if you scrape the scales off while it's whole, and makes the process more pleasant-- no scales everywhere getting stuck to the meat, the knife will cut through the skin easier, etc. Plus you are left with skin that's edible.

  • @jejemanson
    @jejemanson Před 26 dny

    Nice Job for a first one ! How much did this fish cost in France ?
    Love your work ! keep going Alex !

  • @tonyr6303
    @tonyr6303 Před 24 dny

    Having worked in a high end kitchen, I remember being showed to fillet a big salmon by using a long and sharp bread knife, you can just saw easily through bones. It sounds pretty rough but works really fast and well 😂

  • @Juhpol
    @Juhpol Před 26 dny +2

    Creamy salmon soup is the way to go with the spine & the head

  • @peterhuehn6137
    @peterhuehn6137 Před 25 dny

    You've done several videos in the new studio already, but we still need a video where you do a full tour of the new space.

  • @rytterv
    @rytterv Před 25 dny

    This was me a few years ago. I ended up finding guidance in Josh Niland's books and clips on here. Check out his work if you havent come across it already in your research. I have sushi chef friends who call him god!
    Also you left the collars on the head, best part of the fish mate! Way too good for just going into a stock.
    Cant way to follow your journey!

    • @LloydHZA
      @LloydHZA Před 25 dny

      Niland is a genius. His books changed my approach to fish completely

  • @fg87fgd
    @fg87fgd Před 25 dny

    Very good job for a first-timer. I recommend Reed the Fishmonger for further improving your skills, and practice, practice, practice....

  • @saschakolb7102
    @saschakolb7102 Před 26 dny

    Well done 👍

  • @HeyNonyNonymous
    @HeyNonyNonymous Před 25 dny

    One tip: filletting the second side is always harder. So make sure you start with the side less convinient for your dominant hand - to make it a little easier with the second side.

  • @euroford
    @euroford Před 17 dny

    Imagine how fun this is when you catch it yourself!

  • @2agrinh
    @2agrinh Před 26 dny

    Keep the skin on for the gravlax next time, and a tip, it's very convenient to make it vacuum packed in a sous vide bag to make sure that all of the fish stays in contact with the brine that's formed.

  • @AscendtionArc
    @AscendtionArc Před 26 dny

    Thanks for this.
    There's 2 ways to fillet most fish: Cooks: Chop and slide the blade.
    Chiefs: Slice->Lift->Repeat(Slice->Lift).

  • @skullsuga
    @skullsuga Před 25 dny

    My friend, salmon skin sushi hand rolls are one of life’s greatest pleasures.

  • @x.zh.6742
    @x.zh.6742 Před 25 dny

    try a longer knife. makes life much easier (one clean slice rather than one from the top, one from the bottom). Also, LOVING this, really looking forward to the series, thx, Alex ❤

    • @Bozebo
      @Bozebo Před 25 dny

      You mostly use the tip of the knife though right so longer is just for better reach (but worse control if using the tip) if it's a big fish?

  • @finmiesterb
    @finmiesterb Před 22 dny

    Great Camera Work, looking movie quality!

  • @AntoniusTyas
    @AntoniusTyas Před 25 dny

    My first lesson of cooking is cleaning fish. Ever since I was a 5 years old my grandma let me help with cleaning the carp or tilapia she bought from the market. So as I grew older I never found myself feeling awkward when dealing with fresh fish. Filleting a fish, however, is still a challenge I've yet to master. I can do it, but not as good as fishmongers.

  • @pavoutsinas
    @pavoutsinas Před 26 dny +3

    Plyers might not be food safe. Most tools are contaminated with lead or cadmium. Restaurant supply shops will have some very sharp tweezers for this job that work excellent!

    • @TheDuckofDoom.
      @TheDuckofDoom. Před 26 dny

      False, unless he just walked in from using those pliers to clean the lead battery posts on his car and didn't even bother wash them they are not contaminated. Clean [new] pliers do not contain lead or cadmium, they are made of low-alloy steel and neither lead nor cadmium is used as a steel alloying agent. Mainly because they boil below the melting point of iron making them evaporate without extremely expensive exotic foundary processes that would raise the price from $2/pound to $200/pound. even if they did get a micro contamination, the elements are locked inside the iron matrix so very little is exposed at the surface to react. though there was a time when cadmium was used as a specially galvanic protective plating I have never seen it used on common hand tools, zinc and chrome are the preffered plating(zinc only on the absolute cheapest tools) Even with plating unless you are boiling the pliers and fish together in an acidic sauce, or using the tool to hold the food in direct flame for an extended time(enough to vaporize some of the metal plating) then there is no chance of significant metal transfer. zinc is an esential nutrient, although in small amounts so it isn't a major concern. Chromium plating is no worse than stainless steel, which gets its stain resistance from a large amount of chromium (about 15-20% by mass for typical alloys) which forms a chromium oxide layer on the surface.

    • @pavoutsinas
      @pavoutsinas Před 25 dny

      ​@@TheDuckofDoom. That's plausible. Notice I stated "MIGHT". Let's put the metallurgy aside, how about the soft grips of the pliers. A lot of silicone and plastics have been found to be contaminated. Even Kitchen Aid and Oxo products are turning out to be contaminated with heavy metals. Let me know when you get an XRF gun to test some items I would definitely like and sub your videos to see the actual results. Until then if it isn't NSF-rated or stainless then I would not use it in a kitchen I am working in.

  • @imihaitza
    @imihaitza Před 24 dny

    Outdoor Chef Life has a great tutorial video on how to fillet a fish and especially salmon

  • @Getpojke
    @Getpojke Před 25 dny

    Give me most mammals or fowl & I'll happily butcher them pretty well. But even though fish is probably my main protein these days I always have a little trepidation breaking them down. Flat fish like flounders or turbot especially give me the chills. I Do however love it when I get a fish the size you had there & an occasion to cook it whole. Then I can break out my gleaming copper poissonière/fish kettle. Always looks, smells & tastes amazing. 🐟

  • @edwardquan
    @edwardquan Před 26 dny +8

    If you descaled the skin first you could then fry the skin and it's lovely crispy

    • @misan2006
      @misan2006 Před 26 dny +1

      I would dehydrated it first at 100C for 2 hours, then let it cool down to later fry it.

    • @TonyChan1986
      @TonyChan1986 Před 26 dny

      yes, i always pan fry it without any oil

  • @mmeiselph7234
    @mmeiselph7234 Před 26 dny +1

    For pin bones I actually use a needle driver (wife is a surgeon, so we have them lying around). I apparently hold it wrong, however.

  • @ERey55
    @ERey55 Před 26 dny

    AMAZING JOB ALEX!! I can't imagine the cost of that whole salmon... 😮 Here just one of those cuts is very pricey.

  • @BiggMo
    @BiggMo Před 25 dny

    Alex, you should had come to then Pacific NW, we would had taken you out to catch a salmon to learn to fillet

  • @johnneale3105
    @johnneale3105 Před 25 dny

    Oh Alex, top notch video - I've been there trying to fillet fish with little experience and so feel for you! By the way, you said you worked in a fishmonger's 20 years ago - was child labour a thing back then in France?

  • @fornavnetternavn6279
    @fornavnetternavn6279 Před 26 dny +2

    «Caught in Ireland» that looks very farmed to me, seems like a strange way to phrase it

  • @GarthScholtz
    @GarthScholtz Před 23 dny

    Great first attempt! You forgot to scale the fish though. It's much easier to do it when the fish is whole and I usually do it in a large plastic bag to limit the mess in the kitchen.